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Susan Sly's Official Blog September 09, 2010
Monday, March 30, 2009
Madonna 'adopts' another one
Apparently Madonna is in Malawi as we speak finalizing adoption on a baby girl named Mercy.  This is really quite interesting as the rest of the world cannot adopt children in Malawi.  Isn't it amazing what money can buy?
 
According to my government sources Madonna is going to open a girl's school in Malawi.  Let's hope that she comes through on that.
 
I have friends in Malawi who cannot leave the country or they will lose the children they have adopted. 
 
I am happy that Madonna is giving this child a great life.  I think, however, that this sets a precedent.  Is Malawi going to open its doors to foreign adoption or does one have to be a celebrity to forego the rules?
 
Chris and I are in the process of becoming guardians to a girl in Malawi however we have been told that there is no way she can leave the country until she is 18. 
 
The government of Malwai should consider losing the double standard.  There are millions of children in that country who are desperate for love, safety and health.
Posted by ssly @ 07:07 am
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Friday, March 20, 2009
The Plight of Girls

Glady 2008This past week one of the little girls, in the sustainability project that Chris and I contribute to, was very ill.  In addition to Malaria she was showing signs of infection and T.B.  This little girl, Glady lives in a rural village outside of Lilongwe.  In the village people live in mud huts with thatch roofs.  They survive on corn, only if it rains and protein is non-existent.  Protein provides amino acids which fuel brain and body development.  Protein is essential to boost an immune system as the body creates anti-bodies from protein.  This village, like so many, has no electricity or running water.  The people have never been taught simple things like irrigation, clean water storage or basic hygiene to prevent disease.  Children like Glady die all the time. There is no money to buy medicine and even if there was, most clinics lack basic supplies.

 

A girl in Malawi is taught from an early age that she is inferior to her brothers.  Girls are expected to get up early, gather fire wood, assist with cleaning and food preparation and head to school exhausted where they cannot focus on their education.  After school the routine is the same with very little time for homework.  The boys are not expected to do chores.

 

In my conversation with Joyce Banda, the Vice President of Malawi and one of the most powerful women in all of Africa, she said that girls are taught to believe they are second class citizens from the beginning.  They are taught that they have no value.

 

Mrs. Banda was gracious with her time and invited me to do a Have It All Woman conference in Malawi when I come back.  I am deeply grateful to Joyce for another reason which I will post later.

 

The plight of girls continues as we find that the village chiefs are literally selling virgin girls as young as 8 and 9 to have sex with men to rid the village of HIV/AIDS.  The witch doctors in Africa are powerful.  Just look to Burundi where albinos Africans are being slain as their body parts are foretold to bring luck in fishing and finding gold.  Witch doctors tell men that sleeping with and deflowering virgins will bring them luck and good health. 

 

After a girl is raped she then feels worthless.  She feels betrayed and yet, because women do not have a voice, this goes on day in and day out.

 

We also heard stories of girls reporting rape to the police.  The women officers were the harshest because they told the girls that they were 'asking for it' if they were already menstruating.

 

In Malawi, girls have a terrible life.

 

Joyce Banda thankfully provides hope.  She is an advocate for women and children.  She is well known throughout the world and is the first woman to hold such a high position in Malawi and one of the first in Africa.  She does not have it easy though.  With the coming election many women will not vote and some are so weary that they feel nothing will change.  There is a mood of ambivalence.

 

I feel grateful to live in North America where women have a say.  I also feel grateful to be living life on my own terms and live in a place where Chris and I can make as much money as we choose based on our own efforts; money which can change and save lives.

 

We were able to help Glady.  We took her to a clinic where she got medication.  PK and Sandy also took Glady and her father to lunch. Glady literally licked the last bone of the chicken leg she was eating.

 

In Malawi, I have learned that people go hungry all the time and very few know the sensation of a full belly.

 

Jones, the social worker, who helped me find the girl to interview, was always grateful for the meals I bought him.  He never asked for anything though graciously accepted warm dinners of chicken and chips - a local favorite.

 

For those of you reading this know that you have the power to do more with your lives.  You do not need to play small.  Anytime you are seduced into complaining that your life is so hard or that you aren't making it in business please remember that there are so many people who are waking up this morning wondering if they will be raped, killed or watch their child starve to death.

 

You can make a difference.  Go out and play really big today.

 

I will be posting the story of "Joyce" - yes another Joyce, which is a pseudonym for my new 'daughter.'  Check back later on to read about her story.

 

Right now, here in Italy, decompressing a little I feel sad at how superficial our lives have become in North America.  Yes, the economy is in a rough state however we cannot lose our faith, we cannot lose our confidence.  Every day that we play small someone dies.  Could you make a difference just by setting aside one dollar per day?  Absolutely - you have no idea.

 

Chris and I are committed to building a new school in Glady's village.  I am going to teach the new teacher basic first aid and Jones will be checking on the kids and reporting to Chris and me.  I feel grateful that we can choose to do that and it is not because we are lucky.  It is because I had many days when people rejected me, said 'no' and laughed at my decision to be an author and entrepreneur.  I stuck with it, had faith and continued on because I knew that if I didn't I couldn't help others.

 

I beg of all of you not to play small.  Start now - make your life about something other than just you.

 

Thank you to all of my blog readers and their great emails. 

 

With Love,

 

Susan


(photo: Glady in  2008)

Posted by ssly @ 11:17 am
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Friday, March 20, 2009
Malawi Updates
Good Morning Everyone - we landed in Rome this morning at 5:00 a.m.  The internet in Malawi was horrible and I was only able to post once.
 
In a few hours I will be posting updates including my conversation with the Vice President - Joyce Banda, one of the most powerful women in all of Africa and give you details of the new 'daughter' Chris and I have.
 
Check back after 1:00 p.m. EST
 
Susan
Posted by ssly @ 07:44 am
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Monday, March 16, 2009
Malawi

This will be a short posting as the internet is unreliable and slow.

We arrived here last night and spent the day working with a social worker to find out what is happening with girls here in Malawi.  There are atrocities.  The new government has improved the conditions however many street kids disappear.  Genitalia from boys and breasts from girls fetch as much as $10,000 US on the black market in South Africa, to the south.

Child prostitution is on the rise and additionally witch doctors telling men that they will be cured of AIDS by having sex with a virgin are huge problems.

The government worker who oversaw the 'adoption' of Madonna's son, David Banda, has been demoted however the truth is that the boy was purchased as foreigners are not permitted to adopt children here unless they reside in Malawi for 6 years.

In a country where there are no birth certificates and children are not accounted for, the problems are many.

 
Posted by ssly @ 02:59 pm
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Thursday, March 12, 2009
Sexism is Alive and Well
At present we are in the Hong Kong airport safely and grateful.  We were almost banned from leaving Cambodia.  At the airport we weighed our luggage and were told it would be $3000 US for the overage.  Sandy and I each have 2 bags, both under 25 kg and are enroute to Rome.  When the agent saw I was pregnant he also said I would require a doctor's note to leave the country.

Interestingly enough, a single man, was told he was allowed 30 kg/item on the same flight where we were told we were only permitted 20 kg/per person.  
 
Were we discriminated upon because we are women?  Most likely.
 
I negotiated the price down to $550 US and was permitted to leave the country.  The agent, apparently following 'employee procedure' also told us that he had the right to pull us off the flight if he choose.
 
This is Cambodia.  I love the country and dealing with corruption is part of the system.
 
Yesterday, at the Trauma Center, girls shared stories of how they had been sold into prostitution to pay family debts.  We found out that this is common.  One girl was sold by a family member after her parents had been kiled by the Khmer Rouge.  At this brothel, she was beaten, tortured and never paid.  After one year of five 'clients' each day the brothel was thankfully raided by police.  By the time this girl was nine years old she had been forced into sex with over one thousand men.
 
There seems to be some kind of perverse notion that having sex with the younger girls reduces the risk of HIV/AIDS.  Many of the customers refuse to wear condoms.
 
One girl, who was forced to sell her viginity, was told that if she asked a customer to wear a condom she would not be paid.
 
Before I board this plane - what is heavy on my heart to share with all of you is that you can make a difference in the world.  Play big.  Ignore the negative news.  God and the Universe is much more powerful.  You can make a massive impact in this world.  God wants you to play big.  He wants you to win.
 
I encourage everyone of you to write down your dreams, go for them with passion, increase your income and donate a percentage to causes that are on your heart.
 
Chris and I work with World Vision because they are on the ground working with these girls.  They are educating the girls, teaching them skills, finding good jobs and helping them love themself.  If you have even $5 to give go to www.stepintoyourpower.com and click through our link to donate to the Trauma Center.
 
Love to all of you,
 Susan

Posted by ssly @ 08:56 am
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Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Brick Factories

Brick Factories

 

On Tuesday we drove to the country to a World Vision development project.  It is very late here and I have an early flight so this post will be brief.

 

On the way to the project we passed a brick factory where we saw young children, some clothed, others naked.  We decided we would stop by on the way back.  Under the guise of foreigners interested in the brick making process we were given a tour and the intricate details of brick making.

 

We secretly shot video and took photos.  The factory, although clean and appearing somewhat safe, employs 30 families.  Children work the brick cutter, fire the kilns and load bricks in the sun to dry.  Small children run barefoot amidst the sharp gravel, stones and dirt on the grounds of the factory.

 

In Cambodia many children attend school for a half day so they can work to support their families.  These children do not attend school as they must help their parents in the factory.

 

This morning we went to the Trauma Recovery Centre and it was really tough.  I admit that I am emotionally bankrupt right now.  I left teary eyed and headed straight into a training event for World Vision where I was the guest speaker to over one hundred staff.  That is the true test of a speaker - to be able to motivate and dig really deep, which I did.

 

Tonight we shot more footage on the streets.

 

I pray that this book I am writing will help these girls.  When I see the Western men trolling the brothels and in the hotels with really young girls on their arms it makes me sick.  People in the West can ignore Cambodia however these men are from our countries - they are our fathers, brothers, doctors, laywers, community leaders...who come here to buy sex.  They are dressed in finely tailored clothes and they act as if this is nothing at all.

 

One of the girls we interviewed today said the message she would like to send the men in the West who pay for sex is this - remember we are real people and we are human beings.  What if I was your daughter?

Posted by ssly @ 02:44 pm
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Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Brothel Hunters
Brothel Hunters - March 09th, 8:42 p.m. Cambodia
 
Sandy and I just came back from trolling the streets with the brothels.  There are so many, they are everywhere.  Some of the girls look to be about ten years old.
 
We took video footage of the streets.
 
One particular street is known to be a favorite among European men.
 
At times girls approached the car.  When they saw that we were women taking photos they ran away and the pimps came running up.
 
Yes, at times my heart was racing.  I think that being six months pregnant is affecting my tenacity somewhat.  Sandy and I also think our husbands would be less than impressed if we got out of the car.
 
On many streets we drove slowly so we could shoot the footage.  Middle aged white men solicited for girls. Fortunately none of them saw us recording.
 
Although one can read articles and see shows like 20/20 it is a sickening reality to discover just how many brothels there are here.  
 
When girls get AIDS they end up being thrown out of the brothels and solicit on the streets.  We discovered that the going rate for sex is less than $10.  For higher end girls it can be slightly more.
 
We also found out that virgins can be purchased for less than $1000 US and that the girl is often forced to spend several nights with the man who buys her.
 
If a man wants to have sex with a boy he can go to one of the local parks.  He simply tells the pimp he wants a boy and the boys are waiting in the darkness under the trees.
 
The economy may be affecting the entire world however prostitution is alive and well in Cambodia.
 
Tomorrow we travel to a rural World Vision ADP - Area Development Program.  Our trip will take us by van and ferry to a remote project called Kash Kandal.
 
In contrast to city children, the rural children tend to be less opportunistic and healthier. 
This week we will also interview, Thea, a former prostitute who sold her virginity for $400 US to feed her family.
 
Although we are heading to bed, for the girls and boys who are forced to traffick - their night is just beginning.
 

Posted by ssly @ 07:21 pm
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Tuesday, March 10, 2009
T.I.C
T.I.C. - This is Cambodia

 
We arrived on Sunday evening to the ebb and flow of Phnom Phen.  Even though it has only been a year I was quickly reminded of how much this place has impacted me.  I don't know if I come here to help or coming here serves to help me.  I do know that, for whatever reason, I am supposed to be here right now.
 

Cambodian drivers are fairly slow.  There seem to be unwritten rules to the road.  Locals understand them though, as a foreigner, I cannot.  There are few traffic lights and mopeds with families, including infants, glide along beside trolleys and pick up trucks full of people.

The parks are alive with the energy of people every evening.  Badminton and pick up games of soccer are a common site.  The trees are in bloom and amidst the extreme poverty of the shanties, splashes of purple, white and yellow provide a reprieve from the sadness.

We passed a group of four and five year old boys huddled by the side of the road, appearing to be in deep conversation.  Children here are out on the streets often without an obvious adult.  Small girls and boys without shoes and in torn garments play amidst the dirt and rubbish. 

I wonder if I am somewhat desensitized.  Perhaps I see the hope in the sadness, the possibility amidst the tragedy.

We came here to serve.  I have been asked to do an 'inspirational' talk to the staff of the Trauma Centre, a World Vision rescue project for girls who have been sold into sex slavery.  The last time I was here the youngest child was four.  She ran up to our van holding her teddy bear and smiling.  Beneath the smile was years of wisdom, her innocence robbed by multiple rape. 

My question is this - what do I say to inspire these staff when they are the one's who inspire me?  How do I look into the eyes of these children and tell them that they have every opportunity in the world to create change?  The children of North America  are so blessed.  People in our society often take for granted how much we have.  To be complaining about stock portfolios, the economy and jobs when, in North America, whatever happens there is some sort of assistance.  In Cambodia, assistance is limited and in a country with NGO's working overtime to deal with sex trafficking, starvation, land mines, education and AIDS how do you even begin to compare it?

Today we are venturing out into the city to experience the sounds, the smells and the pulse of this culture.  My hope is to take some photos of the noodle houses, which by day are merely restaurants, and by night are brothels.  In Cambodia, much is not as it seems.  The pain of the people, the recent scars left by the Khmer Rouge, are bubbling beneath the happy smiles and the desire to serve tourists like myself. 

I came here to help and in the end will be helped.  That is the irony.

This is afterall...Cambodia

Posted by ssly @ 11:00 am
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