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J.K. Rowling's charity organisation Lumos released a new short video called 'Behind the Walls, which focused on how eight million children were still institutionalised around Europe 25 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, and explodes the that orphanages are full of orphans. The Harry Potter author narrates for a bit at the end of the movie. For more on how to help, head to the site right here; click the image of Rowling here to watch the video.

Quote:
In the film, J.K. Rowling says: “This is a massive global problem – eight million children trapped in institutions around the globe. But it’s a problem we can solve. I think all of us want to think that we’ve helped give the next generation the best possible start in life.”

 

Toddlers tethered to filthy cots, lying in their own waste. Children rocking backwards and forwards, unfed, unclothed, unloved and incarcerated in buildings with no heating or sanitation. Silent babies, aware from their earliest days that no-one would come if they cried.

The jubilant scenes of the Berlin Wall being ripped down in 1989 were followed by a different set of images showing the horrific reality of life for babies and children in hundreds of grim‘orphanages’ in Central and Eastern Europe. These images provoked international outrage,which was intensified when the disturbing truth emerged: these children were NOT orphans.

Twenty-five years have passed since we saw those images but – unlike the Berlin Wall– harmful institutions have not been consigned to history, and most of the children who live in them are still NOT orphans but separated from their families as a result of grinding poverty, disability and discrimination.

Today, in the European region, up to one million children live in institutions, denied their rights to a family life, locked away from their communities. A further seven million children are estimated to live in institutions – also known as orphanages - around the world.

A new film by Lumos, Behind the Walls, which reminds us of the desolation of life in institutions and orphanages, can be viewed here. In the film, J.K. Rowling says: “This is a massive global problem – eight million children trapped in institutions around the globe. But it’s a problem we can solve. I think all of us want to think that we’ve helped give the next generation the best possible start in life.”

A short new report called The Global Picture of Children in Institutions, shows that institutionalisation of children is not just an Eastern European issue but a serious global problem. Data from a wide array of sources demonstrates strikingly the high rates of children living in orphanages who are not orphans.

• 95-98% of children living in so-called orphanages in the European region have living parents
• 80% of the 30,000 children in institutions in Haiti have a living parent or close relative
• 77% of the 12,000 children in institutions in Cambodia are not orphans
• 90% of the 21,000 children in Sri Lankan institutions are not orphans
• Up to 94% of an estimated 500,000 children in institutions in Indonesia have a living parent
• Up to 90% of the 4,500 institutionalised children in Ghana have a living parent8

Research has consistently shown the negative impact of institutionalisation on children’s health, development and life chances9. Children’s charity Lumos was founded by J.K.Rowling to help countries prevent further institutionalisation of children; to close institutions;to reunite institutionalised children with birth families or close relatives, or place them in foster or adoption families; and to run community services to support them. These reformed systems support birth families foremost, as well as kinship care (with relatives), foster care and a minority of small group homes giving specialised care.

Lumos CEO Georgette Mulheir – recently listed in the top 30 Most Influential Social Workers Alive Today - explains that because institutions run to routines, the needs of the children come second: “Children growing up in institutions demonstrate delays in all areas of development,” she said. “They struggle to form healthy attachments to their over-stretched,shift-working carers. In poor-standard institutions children may even fail to sit, stand, walk and talk by the age of four. The resulting lack of emotional and physical contact, regular stimulation and interaction leads to significant impairment of brain development among infants raised in institutions. Those who remain longer than six months recover only partially and demonstrate continued developmental and emotional difficulties throughout their childhood and adolescence.”

Malnutrition and death are a high risk for young children and children with disabilities living in institutions, who need extra time and support to eat. For this reason malnutrition occurs even when there is plenty of food.10 In one institution for children with disabilities, Lumos found that of the children that had ever left, 78% had in fact died. Those who survived to adulthood were moved to another institution.11 Other consequences of institutionalised care for children include poor self-confidence, lack of empathy, aggression, tendency to self-harm and delayed language development. 12,13

As institutionalised children grow into adults they suffer severely reduced life chances.According to one study, children in institutions are ten times more likely to be involved in prostitution, 40 times more likely to have a criminal record and 500 times more likely to commit suicide.14

Despite this, children with living families continue to be housed in institutions across the world. One estimate suggests there are 6-8 million children living in institutions worldwide15,but this figure could be much higher16.

Progress is being made towards Lumos’ goal of bringing the institution of children to an end by 2030 in Europe and by 2050 in the rest of the world. In the last four years, the charity has helped to support 12,000 children to move from institutions to safe, caring family environments; it has saved the lives of 459 children suffering from malnutrition and neglect; it has trained over 15,000 social workers, health professionals, teachers and policy makers;and it has helped change rules, that came into force this year, which re-directs EU funds for Member States away from investing in institutions towards family-based services that support vulnerable families to stay together.

“As far as orphanages are concerned, we recognise that Lumos is challenging a decades-old belief that ‘orphanages are good for children’ and that this may be a difficult message for staff who work, often voluntarily, in orphanages, as well as the millions of concerned citizens who donate to charities supporting them,” said Georgette Mulheir. “However, our case, simply, is that there is a better way.”
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