Salesians Help Child Soldiers
Recover from Their Ordeal
(ANS – New Rochelle – February 14, 2022) – Thousands of children are being recruited and used in armed conflicts all over the world. Between 2005 and 2020, more than 93,000 cases of children recruited and used by the warring parties were verified. The actual number of cases is believed to be much higher. UNICEF recalled this on February 12, which was International Day Against the Use of Children Soldiers.
“Often referred to
as ‘child soldiers,’ these boys and girls suffer extensive forms of exploitation
and abuse that are not fully understood in this term,” UNICEF emphasizes. The
warring parties, in fact, use children not only as fighters, but also as scouts,
cooks, porters, guards, messengers, and more. Many, especially girls, are also
subjected to gender-based violence.
According to the
latest annual report by the U.N. secretary general on minors and armed
conflicts, in 2020 the United Nations verified 26,425 serious violations,
including the recruitment and use of 8,521 children, an increase compared to
the 7,750 cases recorded in 2019.
“Children utilized
in hostilities and war have faced unimaginable violence and abuses and need our
support to have a second chance in life,” said Fr. Gus Baek, director of
Salesian Missions in New Rochelle. “In countries around the globe, Salesian
missionaries work with former child soldiers so that they may overcome the
traumas of war and reintegrate into society.”
For example,
in Colombia, one of the countries most afflicted by the phenomenon
of child soldiers, the Salesians are active with various centers and programs
for their recovery. One of the model centers is in Cali. Upon their
arrival at the Don Bosco Center, the young people who are welcomed receive
a uniform and the tools that correspond to the profession they have chosen to
learn. More important, they are given a chance to regain their personal
identity and start rebuilding their self-esteem and trust in others. The
Salesian center counts on a team of professionals who help the young people to
establish a formation plan. Young people can take courses to become
electricians, industrial mechanics, auto repair technicians, cooks, tailors,
beauticians, welders, IT operators, accountants, librarians, or secretaries.
Courses are the cornerstone of development, and young people also learn safety
rules there, such as handling machines and products, and undergo life-skills
training that helps them regain the ability to relate to others as well. There
are currently 30 young people in training at this center.
But there is more
than just recovery; prevention is also important. In the city of Bamako,
the capital of Mali, the Salesian Pere Michel training center is
bringing joy, providing education, and fostering peace among the young people
of the Niarela district and the outskirts of the city, functioning as a
deterrent for children being recruited as child soldiers. In a country that in
the space of nine months during 2020-2021 has suffered two coups d’etat, these
young people receive the opportunity to play sports, learn music, study in its
library. In this way, they are kept away from the street, from harmful habits
such as alcohol or drugs, acquire useful skills for their present and future,
grow in safety, and do not fall prey to those who want to use them in conflicts
and operations much larger than they.
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