Many children with disabilities continue to be socially marginalised
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Personalised care means that children are given a good start in life (photo: SOS archives).
Many of these disabilities are preventable if mothers are provided with better prenatal and postnatal medical care, given advice on nutrition and have access to food and safe drinking water. However, early intervention measures are not always available, especially to those living in poverty. Adolescents and young people are at risk of acquiring disabilities due to work-related injuries or risk-taking behaviour. Children with disabilities are vulnerable to exploitation, trafficking or abuse.
In spite of the growing disability rights movement, people with disabilities in India continue to be socially stigmatised. They are more likely to be illiterate and have fewer employment opportunities than the general population.
Sadly, families with a child with disabilities often see him or her as a burden, and this leads to an increased social marginalisation of the child, who is not given the opportunity to live a dignified life. A significant proportion of children with disabilities do not attend school. The rate among children with particular disabilities is extremely high, for example more than 60 per cent of six-to-thirteen-year-olds with multiple disabilities and almost half of those with mental disabilities in the same age group do not attend school. There is limited aid for families to send their child with disabilities to school. Furthermore, schools are not always adapted to the needs of children with disabilities and there are limited technological aids to help them with their learning.
Providing children with disabilities with love and special support
SOS Children's Villages India had been asked many times to start a project for children with disabilities. There was a shortage of organisations which supported children with mental or physical disabilities, so we designed a special programme. The government of the state of Madhya Pradesh provided a piece of land, which is about 40 km from the town of Bhopal.
What we do in Khajuri Kalan
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The SOS mothers at SOS Children's Village Khajuri are especially trained to care for children with disabilities (photo: SOS archives).
Some children attend the local schools while others go to the SOS Hermann Gmeiner primary school. As well as benefiting from a special educational programme, the children who need it have access to physiotherapy, hydrotherapy, and speech therapy at the medical centre.
As the children get older, our organisation also provides vocational training in craftsmanship and agricultural production and processing. Among other things, the young adults have achieved successful harvests of wheat, soybeans and other vegetables. Young people can move into the special youth programme which can accommodate up to 50 young adults; they are provided with professional support while they attend further education, start a vocational training course or work.