The flip-flops have landed!

16 Dec

Educators’ Trust India have just sent me this photo – isn’t it wonderful?

It shows the ETI team distributing the children’s flip-flops which (fellow volunteer) Natasha and I bought a few days before I left Goa.  We went to the local (non-touristy) market and,  with the help of our lovely taxi driver Satish,  negotiated a good price for 20 pairs of sturdy, rigid soled flip-flops in assorted sizes,  from ages 3 to 12.

They worked out at around £1 per pair;  we could have paid less,  but we wanted to get the better quality flip-flops so that they stood up to the wear and tear of life in the rural slum and on the beach.

So here are the children trying on the flip-flops for size – don’t their parents look proud and happy? The mums are looking on and smiling,  the dads are helping to fit the shoes to the feet.

And here’s a group shot of all the kids with,  for some of them,  their first ever pair of shoes.

I just love seeing how much difference a tiny amount of money can make to these children’s lives.  While I was away,  my very wonderful friend Liz saw my Facebook updates about ETI and e-banked me £20,  simply saying: “spend it how you see fit.”

That £20 bought milk for the children and mums in the field for a month.

£10 will buy 10 pairs of children’s flip-flops and help to protect the feet of girls like Jyoti.

£10 also enables the teachers and children at one of the charity’s schools to have rice for their lunch for a month.

£5 will buy apples and bananas for 30 children.

Small potatoes for us – big impact for these kids.

I’m gradually building a fabulous collection of photos featuring Educators’ Trust India and their work and I’ll post a link to my online album once I get it set up.

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2 Responses to “The flip-flops have landed!”

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Small cash, big impact « Collaborative Lines - December 17, 2010

    [...] Dec The most recent Gender Blog update shares the story of how a £10 contribution towards a few pairs of flip-flops has changed the lives of children in Goa,  thanks to the work of charity Educators’ Trust [...]

  2. In the shade of the banyan tree « The Gender Blog - February 24, 2011

    [...] and colds, head lice and scabies but also a really nasty foot infection on a child – caused,  as described before,  by the lack of shoes.  One little girl was quite ill,  suffering with dehydration and [...]

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