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Closed schools, closed
doors for East Timor's children By Dr William McKeith
Yet last week's visit seemed to be even more disturbing and upsetting than that first one and those that followed. The purpose was to check on two small schools and to locate six local teachers who are being financially, emotionally and materially supported by my Sydney school. The schools' 90 pupils have not attended classes since the ethnic riots in April, and we had been able to make contact with only two of their teachers. Reports indicated the schools had been occupied by international military forces and the teachers and their families, fearing for their lives because of the actions of rival ethnic gangs, had disappeared into the mountains. The people of East Timor are bruised and damaged. They are running scared of people within their country and they don't know whom they can trust. Years of domination, poverty and conflict have undermined their sense of community and destroyed many of their social and educational institutions. Children are everywhere in the streets of Dili. Vacant land is occupied by tented UN refugee camps. From these supposedly safe sites, unclothed and food-deprived children wander, seeking scraps from the dust and the rubbish that lie around what remains of homes and stalls and from what is thrown from the four-wheel-drive vehicles of the international forces. The faces and the human condition of the people reveal the story the statistics hide. The future, the children, are growing up in a society with 80 per cent unemployment and riven by internal ethnic conflict. East Timor is competing with Malawi for the title of the world's poorest nation. The evidence is everywhere: the closed schools, the closed and damaged tertiary institutions, the children hawking cigarettes and phone cards, the number of aimless adolescents sitting along the roadways, idle and looking for trouble. But mostly it is in the faces of the people. In the loss of hope, the vacant expressions, the despair of those in the refugee camps. I tracked down a third teacher. All three are in refugee camps. One is running a small kindergarten, yet the parents of the pupils are unwilling to risk their children's lives by letting them return to school. All six teachers are from the east of East Timor and the three that I located are too scared to return to their schools in suburbs of Dili where much of the fighting has taken place. The displaced families are reluctant to return to the remains of their burnt-out homes. For as long as the dry season continues, the camps are relatively manageable, but with the onset of the monsoon season, a change in housing policy and direction is urgently required. There is disagreement on direction and nation building among the leadership. The signs of social order and control we take for granted are virtually nonexistent in Dili. Many children are growing up with violent death in the family, with uneducated and jobless parents, and without attending school. The picture is bleak. Those of us working with teachers and young people are concerned about the absence of well-educated emerging leaders who can give vision and direction to East Timor. The focus on policing and law and order is essential, but underpinning development with a well-supported, sustainable educational structure is the only way for social transformation to occur, and this will not happen quickly. Companies, especially those seeking to exploit natural resources, must have substantial social and environmental expectations imposed upon them. Employment creation, small business and agricultural joint ventures, and reconstruction of health centres, kindergartens, schools and tertiary institutions are essential needs. Rotary eClub One is a friend of the people of East Timor with its support of health projects for women and children through the Alola Foundation. The club has a close link via its twin-club relationship with the Rotary Club of Dili. If your Rotary club can assist the needy people of East Timor, please send an email message to Past President Chris Joscelyne who is the primary contact for the twin-club relationship between Rotary eClub One and the Rotary Club of Dili. His email address is chris@apro.com.au About the Author: Dr William McKeith is the Executive Principal of PLC Sydney and PLC Armidale, two of Australia’s leading schools, with a combined enrolment of 1,700 students. During his 20 years as a school principal he has nurtured a balance of academic excellence and social responsibility, encouraging positive personal growth and civic commitment, regardless of the academic ability of each student. He is a former member of the Rotary Club of Drummoyne. |
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