Latest KISES newsletter: Emergency Covid-19 response

KISES Emergency Health Relief Programme

Please click on the link below to our most recent KISES newsletter to find out more about how our volunteers are responding to the Covid-19 pandemic in India.

We urgently need donations and funding to help us carry out our Emergency Health Relief Programme in Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh, where slum dwellers are dying not only due to the killer coronavirus bug, but also malnutrition and starvation.

KISES charity believes that all lives matter and will do everything possible to protect the most impoverished and vulnerable members of society during this pandemic crisis and beyond.

https://mailchi.mp/81ba592eccf4/kises-newsletter-april-2197778

KISES fundraising appeal goes out to students everywhere

Children attending KISES mobile school in the Vijayawada slums

KISES is appealing for students all over the world to share their passion for education with hundreds of under-privileged children in India.

“Universities, schools and colleges are all in full swing following the start of the new global academic year, but the slum children of India have never even seen the inside of a classroom,” says KISES UK volunteer Jem King.

“I have come across many wonderful examples of schoolchildren in the UK, Europe and America raising money for the benefit of kids they have never met, living in crippling poverty on the other side of the world.

“Even small fundraising events like car washes, bake sales and sponsored swims can make such a huge difference to children less fortunate who are forced into street begging, rag-picking and worse by circumstances beyond their control.

“And I know there are student groups, such as university and college Asian societies, who are prepared to give up their time to support worthy causes such as KISES’ humanisation programme in the slums and dumps of Andhra Pradesh.

“I have seen first-hand how our KISES mobile schools, feeding programmes and health camps can bring about life-changing results to outcast members of society, but without continuous funding these volunteer-based programmes will be lost.

“KISES is a small NGO run by a husband and wife team which has been fighting for the most marginalised members of Indian society for two decades, beginning with a rehabilitation programme for thousands of people whose lives were devastated by a killer tsunami.

“The monsoon floods in Kerala in recent weeks have served as a reminder of that time when KISES led the emergency response after lives were lost, children orphaned and homes destroyed by natural disaster.

“KISES founder Mr Shoury Babu Rebba and his life partner Mrs Rajani Suram worked tirelessly at the forefront of relief operations to rebuild lives and livelihoods, reconstruct homes, repair and replace fishing boats and nets, distribute livestock and construct toilets.

“I are aware that the public often respond generously to such natural calamities, but the shocking poverty witnessed in places like Vijayawada city is an ongoing crisis which never makes the headlines in our newspapers nor onto our television screens.

“I have witnessed for myself how families can fall prey to evil people traffickers and even slavery; destitute children are pressed into manual labour from an early age, cruelly denied healthcare, education and their childhood.”

Overlooked, or simply shunned by wider society, the poorest people from sprawling Dalit and tribal communities do not have a voice. KISES is willing to stand up for them and champion their cause, but fundraising partners are needed to prevent humanisation programmes from falling by the wayside.

“Education is the key component in these KISES projects aimed at increasing literacy, providing healthcare and nutrition, empowering women,and training the poorest sections of society to help themselves and stand on their own two feet,” says Jem.

“Vocational training, mobile classrooms, health camps, food programmes – they all cost money, so we are appealing for sponsors, donors and fundraisers, whether they be companies, foundations, college and university groups, or simply individuals with a strong sense of social responsibility, to stand up and be counted by helping us to fund our mission in Vijayawada and beyond.”

Please contact KISES UK fundraising manager Meriel Woodward at kises_uk@yahoo.co.uk, communications officer Jem King at jemking@hotmail.co.uk, or Mrs Rajani Suram in India via the KISES India website to get involved.

FOOTNOTE:  KISES needs approximately £1,000 per month to supply free daily nutritious meals to the children in its three slum schools in Vijayawada. As well as helping them grow and learn, this prevents them from begging for food and also acts as an incentive to their parents, often illiterate themselves, to send them to school.

KISES brings a little light into lives of Vijayawada dump dwellers

Dump-dwelling families, without access to electricity, are being provided with solar lamps by KISES
Dump-dwelling families, without access to electricity, are being provided with solar lamps by KISES

Families living and working on the Vijayawada dump do not have access to electricity in their makeshift homes, so KISES has been handing out solar lights as part of their ongoing humanisation programme.

“These people live in homes constructed of any materials they find lying around in the dump and have no facilities at all,” says KISES UK volunteer Jem King.

“Without electricity, they rely on fires for cooking, but have no way of seeing in the pitch black  of the dump after dark. We hope these small solar lamps will make life just that little bit easier.”

KISES founder Mr Shoury Babu Rebba demonstrates one of the solar lamps

Dump humanisation programme offers glimmer of hope for India’s outcasts

An article written for Today’s Kalam magazine by Jem King

THE choking fumes from burning rubbish fill the lungs of tiny children 24 hours a day in the most inhospitable working environment anywhere in India.

KISES worker Riyaz talks to two dump-dwelling children, while the fumes of burning rubbish fill the air
KISES worker Riyaz talks to two dump-dwelling children, while the fumes of burning rubbish fill the air

As if malnutrition, stunted growth, life-threatening disease and total absence of medical care were not enough, families scratching a meagre existence on the Vijayawada dump simply have no escape from the poisonous smoke which constantly hangs in the air.

Children and adults alike nevertheless go about their daily business of foraging though every fresh lorry-load of waste for plastic and scraps of metal to sell for recycling, oblivious to the damage they are doing to themselves.
Shortened life expectancy is an occupational hazard for the rag-pickers of Vijayawada dump.

They appear to accept their ‘untouchable’ status as Tribals and Dalits – the bottom of the food chain, the ostracised, the outcasts of Indian society, powerless, it seems, to escape the clutches of generational poverty.

Untouchability was made illegal in post-independence India, and Dalits substantially empowered, but, like the new-found wealth from a booming Indian economy, this has not filtered down to the most impoverished, the most downtrodden of all.

Shoury Babu Rebba, founder of KISES (Kiranmayi Socio Educational Society), feels it is his duty to stand up for these marginalised people, coming as he does from a lower middle class background.

Being a Dalit himself, he has experienced all kinds of social discrimination and economic backwardness ever since his childhood; and it was this experience that motivated him to work for the redressal of socio-economic evils.

His stated aim is to establish a just society, wherein the poor and the marginalised can enjoy equality, fraternity and justice.

The new KISES mobile school is bringing daily education into the lives of children living and working as dump-yard rag-pickers
The new KISES mobile school is bringing daily education into the lives of children living and working as dump-yard rag-pickers

During December, despite personal concerns over the health of a hospitalized family member, he has given his free time to deliver meals and gifts to city slum dwellers, while establishing a mobile school which offers a glimmer of hope to the children of the dump.

Most recently of all, he staged a health camp at the remote dump yard, the results of which confirmed all fears about the medical condition of those living and working on the mountains of smouldering waste.

Doctors were not keen to travel from the city, but a local medic agreed to join the small KISES team. Health checks were given to adults and children alike and the stark reality was that EVERY patient was found to be in poor health and in need of medication, distributed free by KISES.

Smoke from burning rubbish is silently damaging the health of children and adults living on the Vijayawada dump
Constant smoke from burning rubbish is silently destroying the health of children and adults living on the Vijayawada dump

Once medicines had been handed out, meals and clean clothing were provided for the children, who were also excited to receive some early Christmas gifts in the form of toys, sweets, colouring books and pencils.

But the real gift for these previously uncared-for people will come with the addition of skills training for young adults and the continuation of the mobile programme providing food, education and healthcare.

For more information about KISES please visit www.kisesindia.com

KISES India launches Mobile Health Camp for vulnerable dump dwellers

The first patient is seen by Dr Reddy at the inaugural KISES Mobile Health Camp at Vijayawada Dump
The first patient is seen by Dr Reddy at the inaugural KISES Mobile Health Camp at Vijayawada Dump

IT was such an important day for the long-suffering people of the Vijayawada dump as we launched our KISES mobile health camp.

Our Dr Reddy reported that every adult and child he examined was in poor health and his first patient, Maryamma, was clearly struggling with a fever.

Free medicines were provided to all, including vitamin shots, food parcels were handed out and some new donated clothes presented to the younger children.

Inaugural KISES Mobile Health Camp at Vijayawada Dump

This camp will be the first of many and we are extremely grateful to our local doctor for leaving his practice and travelling out to the dump to help these needy, under-nourished rag-pickers of all ages.

Please donate to my personal GoFundMe page (www.gofundme.com/changing_lives_in_india) or to our new KISES India website (www.kisesindia.com/donate) to help us afford running costs for this, and other life-changing programmes.

Jem King (KISES UK)
December 2017