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Slumdog Millionaire trust 'Jai Ho' has come out to the rescue of the film's child stars Rubina Ali and others by hiring a social worker to look after her.

The Jai Ho Trust was established with financial support from the filmmakers to ensure the welfare of the movie's child stars, including Rubina and Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail. The trust has offered to help by hiring a trained social worker to look after the welfare of Rubina - amid allegations that the nine-year-old girl's father Rafiq tried to sell her for 2,00,000 pounds. However, Rafiq has denied the claims.

The Usnagazine have quoted saying the Director Danny Boyle and Producer, Christain Colson that they will remain commited to working the trust and the family to secure Rubina's long-term best interests. The trust will support Rubina, her parents and responsible authorities to ensure, the rights and interests of Rubina are protected. The trust is keeping regular contacts with Rubina and family and has now hired an experienced social worker to assist in her and Azharuddin's welfare activities. 

The independent trust was set up to ensure that the family of the child stars receive suitable accommodations and a fixed sum of money each month for living expenses. It also covers the education costs for Rubina and her siblings and provides her with a lump sum of money after she turns 18 years old.

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India's railway children

Posted by: jisha in slumshomelesschildren on

At Mumbai Central station in Bombay, a thousand tired passengers disembark from an overnight train. Businessmen with briefcases, barefoot laborers, and wealthy families followed by luggage- toting servants make their way through crowds of waiting passengers seated on the station's marble floor, toward a swarm of taxis outside.

As they disperse, a group of about 25 young people remains behind. Ranging in age from 10 to 20, they are among the permanent residents of Mumbai Central. For them - and countless other children across India who have no other place to live - the station is much more than a transit point; it is an escape from a troubled home, a meager livelihood, and a veil of protection from the chaotic streets of overcrowded Bombay (Mumbai).


On a sweltering May afternoon, Siraj, who has wavy black hair and the taut muscles of a luggage porter, tells his story as he waits to unload a train that is already six hours late. Nearly a year ago, he hopped a train 1,100 miles away in Calcutta after his mother, overwhelmed by his father's illness, kicked him out. "I just got on the train and thought I would find work," he says. Siraj came to Bombay because that was where the train was headed. He stayed because he had nowhere else to go.

 It is difficult to estimate the number of children like Siraj who live in Bombay's stations; their mobility and the overwhelming number of homeless defy surveys. UNICEF estimated in 1994 - the latest year for which figures are available - that India has 11 million homeless children, with a significant percentage living in urban areas.

An estimated 30 unaccompanied children arrive at the city's 125 train stations every day, according to Aasara, a nonprofit organization that supports Bombay's homeless children. They're attracted by the perception that there must be jobs available in the country's most prosperous city, and also by the image of glamour that gives Bombay the reputation of being the Los Angeles of India.

At many of the stations a revolving community of kids come and go. Many of these new arrivals leave the station to live on the streets, end up in red-light districts, or are found and helped by a nongovernmental aid organization (NGO). Some are arrested and end up in juvenile detention. In Mumbai Central and Thane railway stations, the communities of children are more stable, mostly because of the greater presence of NGO representatives, who do what they can to provide food, classes, and clothing. Also, because Mumbai is the terminus for long-distance trains, there is steady work.

Barefoot and dressed in shorts and ragged T-shirts, the boys have become a necessary, though not always welcome, part of stationlife. Most, like Siraj, work as porters, loading and unloading burlap- covered bales of linens from the trains and carrying luggage for passengers. Those too small for such jobs clean trains, sell refilled water bottles, and beg. During slow times, they hang out in video parlors to escape into a Bollywood movie. Many also inhale ink thinner from rags, the cheapest "high" available. At night, they sleep in small groups on sheets of cardboard laid out on the platforms.

Life in the station, Siraj says, is unpredictable. On his best days, he makes 200 rupees, a little more than $4. Other days he earns nothing. Occasionally, vacationing families will hire him as a temporary servant; sometimes he is paid, sometimes not. Siraj says he misses home, where he was at least allowed to rest. "Here the police are always kicking me awake," he says.

Like runaways worldwide, some of these children have fled abusive parents, starvation, or worse. Others leave home for seemingly minor reasons. Bishu, who's 18, recounts jumping a train near his home in the northeastern city of Tripura after being shamed by a public scolding from his parents, who were angry about his relationship with a girl. Some runaways are drawn to Bombay's glitz, land of Bollywood and shining shopping malls. Still others become separated from their families on a train and simply ride until the last stop.

At Mumbai Central, representatives from Saathi, another nonprofit organization supporting homeless children, provide the young residents with a benevolent adult presence. Although there are group homes available, station kids fear institutional life, says Washington Gupta, a Saathi outreach worker. "In an organization, they have to follow some rules," Mr. Gupta says. "These guys want to go to the films, see adult movies. They want to be free."But being free has a high price for these children.

Santosh and Ketn, two of the station's youngest inhabitants, wander the platforms together. Both 10 years old, the pair look impossibly small in the immensity of the station. Santosh arrived in mid-May. Wearing a tiny military uniform and a serious expression, he is vague about his origins, saying only that he came to Bombay to work. During the day, he sweeps trains with a bundle of hay and asks for handouts. Ketn carries a shoeshine brush and a tin of black polish. He says he moves freely among the city's rail stations, avoiding the first-class coaches, where passengers are intolerant of beggars. Do they ever play, have fun? The boys look at each other and shake their heads." No".

The crowds at the stations provide the children with anonymity and a chance to make a living through handouts and odd jobs, but they are also filled with dangers.

By Andrew Strickler 


The latest on latest that goes air on the Oscar Winning movie "Slumdog Millionaire" is the news report brought out by the 'News of the World' a British newspaper, about the child actor of the movie Rubina Ali. The news report says that the father of Rubina tried to sell his nine-year-old daughter for adoption in a bid to escape the Mumbai slums.


News of the World alleged that Rafiq Qureshi wanted 20 million rupees (400,000 dollars, 310,000 euros) for the girl, who played the young Latika in the British hit film set in India. "Slumdog Millionaire", a rags-to-riches tale of children from the slums of Mumbai, won eight Oscars in February, including the best picture Academy Award.


News of the World said its reporters posed as a wealthy family from Dubai, employing its regular "fake sheikh" sting tactic.


The weekly tabloid said a Mumbai informant told them that Qureshi was touting for the highest offer, having already been approached by a Middle Eastern family.


Rubina's father have told the media that he is much more concerned about the child's future since she has brought fortune to the family. It is reported that Rubina's father is ready to discuss about the adoption but would expect some proper compensation in return.


While the producers of Slumdog Millionaire have donated 500,000 pounds to a child development organization that works in the slums of Mumbai to support education and healthcare programs. It is after slamming them last month for not providing for the child actors in the movie.


‘Slumdog Millionaire' star Rubina Ali is said to have been paid more than the Oscar winning film for a drinks commercial with Hollywood superstar Nicole Kidman. According to the nine-year-old slum dweller's father, the money Rubina is receiving for doing the ad is more than the total she got for the film.

Now the complaint by the slum kid's father is that the Film people haven't kept all the promises despite the media created much propaganda on their offer. Rubina Ali, who played the child Lathika in the film "Slumdog Millionaire", have drawn great media attention since the award event at Kodak Theater. Rubina's father Rafiq Ali said that they don't have any information about the trust fund and the 21 pound that was given for her studies have stopped coming. It seems that the family is still dissatisfied with the movie makers and what they had offered. Despite the slum kids were used for the movie, the feeling that they have to still dwell in the same dirty slum again is ruining their mind.

However the family is proud of Rubina's rising profile and hopes to lead a better life in a proper house in near future.

Source: Indianexpress.com


The story and the life of Syed is a lesson to be learned by the child actors of the eight Oscar Awards film "Slumdog Millionaire". What reminded Shafiq Syed about his own childhood and short-lived fame was watching the child stars of "Slumdog Millionaire" in Los Angeles as the film swept the Oscars in February. Having basked in the limelight for his portrayal of a street kid in the 1988 Oscar-nominated film "Salaam Bombay," Syed now struggles to feed a family of five at his home in southern India, Bangalore. His own rags-to-riches story has ended up after some time and he now earns $3 (2.1 pounds) a day driving a motor rickshaw (See the article in Reuters).

This is a kind of warning for the child stars of the Sludog Millionaire. Syed has some advice for this slum kids. He says that "It's good that they have got this huge break, but they should not get carried away and focus on studies so that they can lead a meaningful life on their own when they grow up,". But when compared to Syed, these children have got much more privilege than him. The government have promised to shift them to a new apartment, besides their studies are taken care, a trust has formed to look after their studies and help them financially unto an age. How ever, the children should keep in mind what Syed says. The fame and money will not last!


One third of world's poor children are in India. With a population of a Billion and growing, Indian children, especially those growing up on the streets of India encounter a bleak future. Most of them cared less about future as they played with their cheap toys and siblings. It is amazing with what trash they can play. The poor children are always victims of abuse. These homeless children usually found living in slums or streets. They are forced to do any work even at their very small age. They scavenge through the dirt and filth for things that can be reused and recyclable. These children are prone to any illness as they rummage through the rubbish dump.

Such is the case of the children in Okhla, New Delhi. Children of small age goes through the trash collecting the syringes like seashells from a beach. Their hands scratched and bleeding, the "rag pickers" rinse the syringes and sell them back to the doctors for 10 or so rupees a batch - about 14p. Sometimes the children use them as water pistols, or drink from them. Or they string the pump gaskets together to make jewellery. And when they get ill, their desperate parents take them to the doctor - for an injection( Times Online).

It is shocking to know that around the world 1.3m people die each year from receiving unsafe medical injections. India faces the greatest threat. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that in India alone, 300,000 people die every year as a result of dirty syringes. In India, the average person has three to five medical injections per year. Around 62% of these will be delivered by unsterile or reused syringes. The syringe that is reused may carry lethal infections such as hepatitis B or C, or HIV. The Times Online reports that the problem is not limited to slums or rural villages but private and government hospitals are also reusing syringes. Thousands of people are entering hospitals with minor ailments and leaving with life-threatening infections because practitioners won't spend money on new equipment, or simply don't know any better.


After the success of the Oscar winning film “Slumdog Millionaire”, another film is shaping up from the same slum area of Mumbai's 'Dharavi'. The film 'Barah Aana' is to show not the poverty pornography like in 'Slumdog', but it has casted on a theme, the same Dharavi slum as a place of the working class, where peons, clerks,watchmen and more live together, their lives intertwining like they never do anywhere else. The young, Raja Menon is the writer and director of the film 'Barah Aana'. The film shows the narrow lanes of the slum and a community huddled together.

Barah Aana is a comedy about three friends from Dharavi, a driver played by Naseeruddin Shah, a watchman by Vijay Raaz and a waiter by Arjun Mathur. Raaz’s character, boisterous and mischievous, finds himself in deep soup and stumbles into a crime. He goads his friends to join him and soon all three find their lives spinning out of control.

The 97-minute movie, which will be released on March 20, has done the domestic festival circuit, travelling to Goa, Kerala and Pune, and has been invited for screening at the Museum of Modern Arts, NewYork, in June. The attention Slumdog got after winning Oscars might help this film in a good way. After all this is a film produced by an Indian.


Promises Unkept

Posted by: jisha in slumshomeless on

For the homeless the situation seems always unchanged. According to government surveys, about 65 million Indians, roughly a quarter of the urban population live in slums. The number of slum dwellers or homeless people are increasing day by day. Those who can not afford to build houses or don't have a piece of land, depend on slums as a place for dwelling. These areas where the slum dwellers occupy usually belongs to government or authorities. The time comes when these areas are to be utilized for some developmental purposes and these people are then forced to flee from this place. Such incidents are very common in every state, especially in Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Culcutta, were majority of slum population live. The better portion of slum people in India are in Mumbai, where most poor people reaches in search of a livelihood.

Very recently, in Mumbai there was one such incident of demolition occured. The protesters were beaten by the cops in Mumbai (See news by The Morung Express). The protesters are most commonly the dwellers who have been living in this place for years. For them their years of hard work and belongings are destroyed in just a wink of the eye. Nothing will be done to reahabiliate these people from homelessness. Although promises on building new houses or apartments for these homeless are given, it was always been limited as just promises. With the success of Oscar winning film “Slumdog Millionaire”, the world attention has turned towards India. As the general elections fast approach,political leaders are sure expect on these slum areas with their unkept promises and offers.


India, which is often described as peaceful, stable and prosperous country by the western media, remains home to the largest number of poor and hungry people in the world. About one-third of the world's poor population lives in India. According to World Bank, more than 450 million Indians exist on less than $1.25 a day. India has about 42% of the population living below the new international poverty line of $1.25 per day. The number of Indian poor also constitute 33% of the global poor, which is pegged at 1.4 billion people, according to a Times of India news report. More than 6 million of those desperately poor Indians live in Mumbai alone, representing about half the residents of the nation's financial capital.

There is widespread hunger and malnutrition in all parts of India. India ranks 66th on the 2008 Global Hunger Index of 88 countries .The first India State Hunger Index (Ishi) report in 2008 found that Madhya Pradesh had the most severe level of hunger in India, comparable to Chad and Ethiopia. Four states — Punjab, Kerala, Haryana and Assam — fell in the 'serious' category. "Affluent" Gujarat, 13th on the Indian list is below Haiti, ranked 69. The authors said India's poor performance was primarily due to its relatively high levels of child malnutrition and under-nourishment resulting from calorie deficient diets.

As critics complains about the usage of “Slumdog” in the Oscar Awards winning movie “Slumdog Millionaire”, and for showcasing India as a poverty stricken nation, fogets the real fact about India. The millionaire's and the billionaires neglects the poor and therefore the gap between the rich and the poor widens. So is the gap between two Indians. As 'Slumdog Millionaire' has drawn a global attention, those politicians and the rich who stumps away the poor should come down from their statuquo and be ready to pay attention to the poors needs.

 


The Oscar Awards winning movie Slumdog Millionaire, has created a wave among the Westerners, who have watched the movie. Many of the Charitable Trusts in India have started to experience its feedback from people in Europe, asking for details of children whom they can sponsor. Yahoo News have reported a news showing a surge in Child's sponsorship.

While the child actors in the movie have impacted psychologically after returning to the same old condition of their tarpaulin houses in Mumbai. Now the things has completely changed with them. The children refuse to return to their old condition before the movie bagging eight Oscar awards(see..Yahoo News). Even though, the state government have promised to shift these children's families to new apartments, it seems to take much longer time. Since the plight of children have changed, their families in turn have also started put them in demand. Rubina Ali, who stars the child Lathika in the movie is put on a bargain by her own mother who left her early and the step-mother, who is now looking after her (Yahoo News).

Now the slum people have awaken to the light that the 'Slumdog Millionaire' have created. But there are comments that the people are becoming too greedy. When all of a sudden the poor people come across riches, their mentality changes and they will start to look upon them with great unrest. The movie is said to create some impact upon the lives of slum people in India. Especially, the children who are deprived of basic things in life. The westerners as well as Indians might contribute or will be ready to take up sponsorship for at least one child. So, the hope is awaking?


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