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Contact
details
Director:
Br Chris Wills FMS
Postal
Address:
Marist
Asia-Pacific Solidarity
PO Box 536
Paddington, Qld 4064
Australia
Telephone:
0407 017 774
(International: +61 4 0701 7774)
Email:
cwills@fms-sydney.org.au
Promotions:
Laurie Lawira
Postal
Address:
P.O.
Box 138
Drummoyne NSW 1470
Australia
Email:
mapsmedia@gmail.com
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Kuya Centre for
Street Children Kuya in the local language means big brother
and big brothers are meant to care. Brother Paul Murphy is
the leader of Kuya and he leads a team of Filipino youth workers
who are ‘big brothers’ to kids who are homeless
on the streets of Manila in the Philippines.
The Philippines
straddles the equator off the 800km off the mainland coast
of Asia, close to Malaysia and China. The capital city is
Manila and there are about 7000 islands in the archipelago.
Kuya was established
in 1991 by an association of religious brothers in the Philippines.
The Centre is for young people who lose contact with their
families and live on the streets. The aim is to re-unite the
street kids with family or to refer them to a more stable
and supportive living arrangement.
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The
Work |
- A street outreach
that keeps contact with kids who have no family.
- A house for
homeless kids until they find more permanent accommodation.
- A community
support team which targets 100 young people in a nearby
squatter settlement and helps with their education and food.
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Funding |
Kuya runs on a
shoestring budget of $4500 per month, most of which is raised
by the local organisations. Br Paul has to find about AUD$1000
per month extra. Some of this comes from the income generating
work of the kids themselves and some comes from International
Marist partners
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People |
The people have
been influenced by Spanish colonisation since the mid 1500s.
Then in 1899 the USA governed the islands until the republic
achieved independence after WWII in 1946. There are 84 million
Filipinos and the official languages are Filipino (related
to Tagalog), English, and regional languages along with 70
local languages.
Manila has a population
of 14 million people and is really a collection of many cities.
Most are Christian (94%) and there is a significant Muslim
population (5%) concentrated in the south. Traffic and pollution
make it very difficult to move around and squatter settlements
are where many of the poorer people live.
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Young
People |
Some young people
lose contact with their families. It is very easy to hide
yourself or get lost in Manila. The reasons for the separation
would be similar to the reasons for such a thing happening
here in Australia but the whole situation is made worse by
extreme poverty. Young boys survive on the streets by making
money as car park attendants, car watchers, vendors, messenger/newspaper
boys, collecting/selling junk, stealing, begging, prostitution
and shoe shining.
The only way out
of this cycle is through education. The Kuya Centre helps
kids stay at schools and graduate.
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| Marists |
Brother Paul, an
Australian brother, is the Program Director. He was invited
to take on this role after spending many years in the Philippines
working with young Marist Brothers in a social justice outreach
that went out into the cities and worked with the street kids.
High school students from a variety of national and international
high schools and colleges (including Australian) join in immersion
experiences and work with the kids in their activities.
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