The Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC) – Moldova, through the Association of Professional Women from Moldova has established and officially launched on, 26 July 2022 a children’s play park, in commemoration of the End Child Poverty 10 – anniversary, dubbed ECP@10.
The park is intended to provide a safe space for children to play, dialogue and even initiate and enable them take actions to address poverty, for example, hosting the Children Solutions Lab sessions.
GNRC Moldova has over the years been a valued partner in addressing child poverty. Most notably in May 2020; amid the COVID-19 pandemic, we partnered with them in supporting education for vulnerable children in the country. It is worth noting that during that time, education in nearly all countries worldwide had shifted physical school courtyards to digital spaces, which posed socio-economic challenge especially for vulnerable children across the world.
In commemorating the End Child Poverty 10 – anniversary, we launched a campaign, themed – All out to End Child Poverty: Looking back, Forging ahead. Through the campaign, we have set out to celebrate global progress made towards overcoming child poverty over the last 10 years as well as appreciate our champions, including members of the GNRC. Thus, we not only appreciate GNRC Moldova for this great way of celebrating 10 years of End Child Poverty, but we also view it as a unique action geared towards addressing child poverty.
The ECP@10 campaign aims to enable us collectively amplify efforts to eradicate child poverty and mobilise our communities to take action for all children. Every action, big or small, counts. The campaign was launched on 16 June 2022 and will run through to the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty (IDEP) commemorations. The campaign is consolidated in this microsite.
The post GNRC Moldova launches children’s park to mark ECP@10. appeared first on End Child Poverty.
The post GNRC Moldova launches children’s park to mark ECP@10. appeared first on Arigatou International.
The Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC) – Moldova, through the Association of Professional Women from Moldova has established and officially launched on, 26 July 2022 a children’s play park, in commemoration of the End Child Poverty 10 – anniversary, dubbed ECP@10.
The park is intended to provide a safe space for children to play, dialogue and even initiate and enable them take actions to address poverty, for example, hosting the Children Solutions Lab sessions.
GNRC Moldova has over the years been a valued partner in addressing child poverty. Most notably in May 2020; amid the COVID-19 pandemic, we partnered with them in supporting education for vulnerable children in the country. It is worth noting that during that time, education in nearly all countries worldwide had shifted physical school courtyards to digital spaces, which posed socio-economic challenge especially for vulnerable children across the world.
In commemorating the End Child Poverty 10 – anniversary, we launched a campaign, themed – All out to End Child Poverty: Looking back, Forging ahead. Through the campaign, we have set out to celebrate global progress made towards overcoming child poverty over the last 10 years as well as appreciate our champions, including members of the GNRC. Thus, we not only appreciate GNRC Moldova for this great way of celebrating 10 years of End Child Poverty, but we also view it as a unique action geared towards addressing child poverty.
The ECP@10 campaign aims to enable us collectively amplify efforts to eradicate child poverty and mobilise our communities to take action for all children. Every action, big or small, counts. The campaign was launched on 16 June 2022 and will run through to the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty (IDEP) commemorations. The campaign is consolidated in this microsite.
The post GNRC Moldova launches children’s park to mark ECP@10. appeared first on End Child Poverty.
The post GNRC Moldova launches children’s park to mark ECP@10. appeared first on Arigatou International.
The International Day for the Eradication of Poverty (IDEP), October 17th 2022, is an opportunity to increase awareness, community actions and advocacy towards ending child poverty.
This year’s IDEP theme is “Dignity for All in Practice: The Commitments we Make Together for Social Justice, Peace and Planet.”
Across the world, about 1 billion children are multidimensionally poor, meaning they lack basic necessities such as nutritious food, quality education or healthcare. This IDEP, we are called to speak up and tackle the underlying issues that cause child poverty. These include social and economic inequalities, corruption, violent conflicts, climate change and environmental degradation, and violence against children.
As we continue to celebrate 10 years of Arigatou International’s End Child Poverty initiative, we invite you to commemorate the IDEP October 17th 2022 together with us, through the ECP@10 Campaign.
4 Ways You Can Participate:
Participate in the 10-for-10 challenge through making an ECP@10 pledge for action. These are impactful individual, group and community actions that empower children and help them to overcome poverty. You can choose to volunteer your skills and expertise during the IDEP, October 17th, by serving children affected by poverty. Or make it a long-term engagement by becoming a regular End Child Poverty volunteer in your community. You can also work together with your friends and your network to donate funds or other necessary resources, towards benefitting children in your community. On our website, we have provided 10 simple action ideas you can undertake. Any action, big or small, counts. Use this link to make your ECP@10 pledge through our website.
During IDEP, October 17th, and throughout the month of October 2022, join us as we commit to mobilise planting of 1,000,000 trees across various locations. You can grow 1 tree, 10 trees, 1,000 trees, or any number of trees according to the resources available to you. Invite your friends and other organisations you to join you. Consider sponsoring another organisation by providing them with seedlings, space to grow the trees, or funds to support tree-planting in their location. By taking part in the tree planting, we are all together contributing in positive climate action and safeguarding the environment. Find out more, on our website.
Create opportunities to listen to children and to work together with children in developing solutions to alleviate child poverty. Consider working with local schools, social clubs, or faith-based institutions in your community, to create safe spaces for children to commemorate IDEP and participate in the ECP@10 campaign. For more information on enhancing meaningful children’s participation, check out our free resources, including a free online course, on our website.
Make your IDEP, October 17th, commemoration memorable by talking about it through your social spaces. Let people know what you are doing towards ECP@10, and how they too can take action. Share your ideas on how your community can come together to end child poverty, as well. Follow us on social media and post your stories and photos using the ECP@10 online community hashtags: #EndChildPovertyAt10 and #ECPat10 and #AllforChildren
Stay up to date on all ECP@10 Campaign events …
Subscribe to our mailing list and be the first to know about upcoming ECP@10 Campaign events. Join our ECP@10 online community, stay connected and tag us through Twitter, Instagram and Facebook, for more updates. Remember to use #EndChildPovertyAt10, #ECPat10 and #AllForChildren on all your social media, so that we can stay connected.
About Us:
The Interfaith Initiative to End Child Poverty (End Child Poverty) mobilises faith communities and faith-inspired resources to overcome poverty that affects children. We are a multi-faith, child-centered, global initiative of Arigatou International. Together with the Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC), Prayer and Action for Children, and Ethics Education for Children, we comprise the 4 initiatives of Arigatou International.
Find us here:
Email: endchildpoverty@arigatouinternational.org
Website: https://endingchildpoverty-10years.org
Facebook: End Child Poverty
Twitter: @IIECP
Instagram: @endchildpoverty_arigatou
YouTube: End Child Poverty – Arigatou International
The post 4 ways you can take part in IDEP 2022 – Ideas Toolkit appeared first on End Child Poverty.
The post 4 ways you can take part in IDEP 2022 – Ideas Toolkit appeared first on Arigatou International.
The International Day for the Eradication of Poverty (IDEP), October 17th 2022, is an opportunity to increase awareness, community actions and advocacy towards ending child poverty.
This year’s IDEP theme is “Dignity for All in Practice: The Commitments we Make Together for Social Justice, Peace and Planet.”
Across the world, about 1 billion children are multidimensionally poor, meaning they lack basic necessities such as nutritious food, quality education or healthcare. This IDEP, we are called to speak up and tackle the underlying issues that cause child poverty. These include social and economic inequalities, corruption, violent conflicts, climate change and environmental degradation, and violence against children.
As we continue to celebrate 10 years of Arigatou International’s End Child Poverty initiative, we invite you to commemorate the IDEP October 17th 2022 together with us, through the ECP@10 Campaign.
4 Ways You Can Participate:
Participate in the 10-for-10 challenge through making an ECP@10 pledge for action. These are impactful individual, group and community actions that empower children and help them to overcome poverty. You can choose to volunteer your skills and expertise during the IDEP, October 17th, by serving children affected by poverty. Or make it a long-term engagement by becoming a regular End Child Poverty volunteer in your community. You can also work together with your friends and your network to donate funds or other necessary resources, towards benefitting children in your community. On our website, we have provided 10 simple action ideas you can undertake. Any action, big or small, counts. Use this link to make your ECP@10 pledge through our website.
During IDEP, October 17th, and throughout the month of October 2022, join us as we commit to mobilise planting of 1,000,000 trees across various locations. You can grow 1 tree, 10 trees, 1,000 trees, or any number of trees according to the resources available to you. Invite your friends and other organisations you to join you. Consider sponsoring another organisation by providing them with seedlings, space to grow the trees, or funds to support tree-planting in their location. By taking part in the tree planting, we are all together contributing in positive climate action and safeguarding the environment. Find out more, on our website.
Create opportunities to listen to children and to work together with children in developing solutions to alleviate child poverty. Consider working with local schools, social clubs, or faith-based institutions in your community, to create safe spaces for children to commemorate IDEP and participate in the ECP@10 campaign. For more information on enhancing meaningful children’s participation, check out our free resources, including a free online course, on our website.
Make your IDEP, October 17th, commemoration memorable by talking about it through your social spaces. Let people know what you are doing towards ECP@10, and how they too can take action. Share your ideas on how your community can come together to end child poverty, as well. Follow us on social media and post your stories and photos using the ECP@10 online community hashtags: #EndChildPovertyAt10 and #ECPat10 and #AllforChildren
Stay up to date on all ECP@10 Campaign events …
Subscribe to our mailing list and be the first to know about upcoming ECP@10 Campaign events. Join our ECP@10 online community, stay connected and tag us through Twitter, Instagram and Facebook, for more updates. Remember to use #EndChildPovertyAt10, #ECPat10 and #AllForChildren on all your social media, so that we can stay connected.
About Us:
The Interfaith Initiative to End Child Poverty (End Child Poverty) mobilises faith communities and faith-inspired resources to overcome poverty that affects children. We are a multi-faith, child-centered, global initiative of Arigatou International. Together with the Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC), Prayer and Action for Children, and Ethics Education for Children, we comprise the 4 initiatives of Arigatou International.
Find us here:
Email: endchildpoverty@arigatouinternational.org
Website: https://endingchildpoverty-10years.org
Facebook: End Child Poverty
Twitter: @IIECP
Instagram: @endchildpoverty_arigatou
The post 4 ways you can take part in IDEP 2022 – Ideas Toolkit appeared first on End Child Poverty.
The post 4 ways you can take part in IDEP 2022 – Ideas Toolkit appeared first on Arigatou International.
Children First
Perhaps grandparents can help in meeting one of the greatest contemporary challenges: translating talk and ideals about putting children first into reality. They cannot stand alone in love and protection, but what grandparents can represent and harness is a threefold gift: the ability to look back, aware of the paths we have traversed, realistic yet also visionary ideals for a future that comes with a later part of life sense of time and urgency, and a robust capacity to savor both love and the magic dreams of childhood. We need all three gifts as we strive to protect, cherish, and support the world’s children.
Moving rhetoric and promises hark back to ideals of childhood: a time of limitless prospects, dreams and discovery, innocence, intense curiosity, boundless love, and spiritual depth. Many a leader and politician has voiced commitments to care and act for children, at countless levels, global to family, extending to every religion, culture, and continent. It would be hard to find leaders with hearts so hardened that they deny the appeals of childhood or the need to protect the young.
And indeed, the progress the world has seen in improving children’s welfare across the world is a remarkable human achievement. Infant and child mortality, a harsh reality over the centuries, is sharply reduced. Child labor persists but 16-hour days in factories for children or a life-time breaking bricks or weaving carpets, once deemed acceptable as a norm, today encounter outrage. Schooling and healthcare were a reality only for the privileged in the past; today the right to education and health care are central human rights and a daily norm in most parts of the world. When children thrive, there are few bounds on what they, and their families and communities, can achieve.
These transformations have come about both because compassionate visionaries and dedicated scientists, religious leaders, politicians, and countless others have worked creatively and doggedly, in partnerships, to change norms and systems.
This progress, that has transformed the lives of children across the world, shows what is possible and what is desirable. But it also shines a harsh light on what is still to be done.
Because alongside children who thrive, there are vast numbers who suffer. These children live in situations of poverty and deprivation, malnourished or starving, subject to illnesses that can be cured, out of school or learning little. The wonders that technology brings cause harm as well. Mobile devices and the internet open worlds of learning but also pornography and trafficking. Far too many children are abused both by those who should care for them and give them love, and, worse still, by flawed and unjust systems. To take one especially disturbing reality, many millions of children face uncertain, stunted futures as they grow up in refugee and internally displaced people’s communities.
Cruelty and neglect have always been a part of the realities of childhood (many fairy tales remind us of those ancient realities). These realities today stand in stark contrast to the knowledge of what can be done to stop them, and the good it offers to society. We can and must do better. The questions and challenges we face today turn far more on how than on what and why. As to who, surely this is a widely shared social and political responsibility
Four imperatives stand out, and, with the kind of partnerships that Arigatou International promotes and inspires, success is within reach. The ideals are set out clearly, notably in the global blueprint that is reflected in the 2015 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and in countless international, national, and local commitments. But each goal demands clear sights and visions, action plans, dedication to partnerships, and solid commitments.
The reality of policy-making is that large gaps can separate noble intentions, promises, and even solid commitments from the pressures of daily action. In the throes of policy-making, budget debates, political bargaining, and interpersonal maneuvers, the needs of children, whose voices too rarely rise above the din of the policy fray, fall down the policy agenda ladder. We need systems and approaches (Arigatou falls in this category) that remind, constantly, creatively, and forcefully, that children must come first. Grandparents, who have rather magical roles and a special kind of love and care can help. We need the time-hardened ability to understand realities together with the capacity to hear children’s inner and outer voices and to imagine well what they can become. The Arigatou coalitions, diverse and working alongside leading governance bodies, can unite and serve this watching, conscience role.
The post Dignity for All in Practice: The Commitments We Make Together for Social Justice, Peace and The Planet. appeared first on End Child Poverty.
The post Dignity for All in Practice: The Commitments We Make Together for Social Justice, Peace and The Planet. appeared first on Arigatou International.