The fundamental rights of a child
Much rhetoric is being published these days about the rights of children. Revisiting this topic from a more realistic and pragmatic perspective, I often wonder what exactly these rights are and whose responsibility it is to ensure their day-to-day application.
Just a week ago, a child in one of our homes told her carer she would willingly give up her most cherished music, favourite clothes and her new mobile phone just to hear mother say to her “I love you”. This is the first and fundamental right of every child: to be loved and cared for. With this solidly in place, you can then build the blocks of education, Christian initiation and the sequential steps of social development.
Thankfully, many children in Malta are blessed enough to enjoy this right throughout their life. But there is also a growing number of Maltese children who are not only deprived of the right to be loved and nurtured but who are also daily submitted to all forms of abuse and cruel treatment.
Eventually these children attract the attention of the police or social workers and are put in a home. Here they’re out of danger and live in a clean and safe environment. More often than not, they also enjoy more luxuries in the form of toys and entertainment than their peers who live with their families – so we all pat ourselves on the shoulder and say “we did a great job”.
While it’s true that these children lack nothing in the home, what they need most is still unavailable to them, and that is regular, carer/child opportunities where emotional repair can start to happen. This is their one last chance at learning that love, like cruelty, is also a reality.
This is not the fault of the carers. These, particularly the religious staff who are there day and night for them, are stretched beyond what is humanly possible to help undo the emotional damage these kids have experienced in their young life.
The carers’ work is much like a mother’s work with her children. It includes cleaning, cooking, washing and ironing and attending appointments at Appoġġ, school or medical/hospital visits. Goodwill is certainly not lacking but the reality is that there is little time for individual attention or carer-child interaction.
The other important issue about which I have written and spoken to our political leaders and to which we continue to give precious little attention is the family environment from which the children were removed in the first place.
Many of them continue to return to this chaotic and harmful setting every weekend, and every Sunday evening they return to the home agitated, angry and unable to settle because of the violence they witness among family members and often towards themselves. This is an essentially toxic environment yet it remains unchanged and untreated.
It is not unusual that these young Maltese citizens in children’s homes tell their carers that their dream in life is to one day ‘kill or injure’ their parents because of the cruelty dished out to them by those who are meant to love them.
Malta had better believe it if it doesn’t want to see a large-scale explosion of delinquency and hard crime in the near future!
Our focus would then not be on cohabitation or divorce but on building bigger and safer prisons to make us all believe that our society remains ‘Catholic, law-abiding and family-oriented’.
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Sabrina Borda
Aug 22nd 2010, 13:59
You have an admirable job caring for the children that have been abused or unloved, but even though you have empathized with these children is does not mean that you are seeing all.
To be Catholic, law-abiding, and family orientated or living separated or divorced does not mean that one does not care for his or her children, on the contrary. The majority of children are well loved and cared for. Most people are not delinquents.