Bucharest

Children in Bucharest are still suffering from disadvantages

SOS siblings at play (photo: J. Lugtigheid)

Bucharest, the Romanian capital, is situated in the southeast of the country. Our organisation is based about ten minutes from the city centre. The nearby Lake Floreasca and park provide the families with a recreation area.

Bucharest is the largest city in Romania, and has grown in recent years as people have moved to it in search of work. It is the country's industrial and financial centre – it generates about a fifth of the country's GDP and its unemployment rate is about half of the rate for the country.

In spite of Bucharest's relative success, it continues to be home to many families and children in need. Various groups of children are particularly disadvantaged. Among these are children with a Roma background; the Roma constitute the largest minority of Bucharest (1.4 per cent of the population of the city is Roma), and Roma children are badly affected by poverty. Another group is the street children; life on the streets exposes them to numerous hazards and to exploitation.

SOS Children's Villages gives direct support to children in need

Over the past two decades little investment has been made at a local level to provide health, education or support to children in need. At a time when poverty is rising and an increasing number of children are losing parental care, SOS Children's Villages has provided vital support to families. In a country with an under-funded health-care system, we have given families health advice and have ensured that their basic needs are met so that children can go to school and receive an education.

What we do in Bucharest

Children from the family-strengthenig programme (photo: K .Ilievska)Children from the family-strengthenig programme (photo: K .Ilievska)SOS Children's Villages provides different kinds of assistance to the local population: support to vulnerable families, pre-school education, loving homes for children without parental care, a youth programme and a mobile "play bus".

SOS Children's Villages works closely with the families in the neighbourhood so that they can stay together. In collaboration with local agencies we ensure that children have access to essential educational, health and nutritional services. We also provide counselling for parents regarding legal and social issues. Young people can live in special youth programmes while they attend further education or training. They are guided by professionals so that they can learn to live independently.

Children who can no longer live with their families, can find a loving home in one of the fifteen SOS families. In October 1998, the SOS Kindergarten was opened; there was a lack of kindergarten places in the area, and so the opening of the SOS Kindergarten was welcomed by parents who had to go to work.

Since 2000, we have been running the Playmobile Bus, a mobile centre which goes to public parks, hospitals, orphanages and stops outside grey concrete tower blocks where many disadvantaged children live. Children are encouraged to play imaginative and educational games, and they can take part in craft, dancing or theatre activities – the aim is to give children a chance to be children and to increase the confidence in themselves and in others around them.