The Star Malaysia

Special cafes for deprived kids

Centres are springing up in Japan where children who are either too poor or lack family support, get to have a decent meal.

-

LAUGHTER and lively chatter filled a room at a modest apartment in Tokyo one recent Thursday night as more than two dozen kids and volunteers gathered around tables laden with curry, rice, salad and fruits.

Misako Omura’s dinner is one of a growing number of “kodomo shokudo,” or “children’s cafeterias,” that are springing up across Japan.

The mostly grassroots efforts seek to address a range of child-related issues, from poverty to ensuring that those with late-working parents get a proper dinner.

A survey by the national Asahi newspaper found 319 such places serving free or lowcost meals across Japan as of May, up from 21 in 2013.

Over the past 70 years, Japan’s rising affluence has banished most of the penury of the lean years during and after World War II, when children sometimes starved and many families went hungry.

But despite its ultra-modern convenienc­es, Japan had the 10th-highest child poverty rate among 31 relatively well-off countries in a 2013 Unicef report.

Poverty in Japan is largely hidden, as it can lead to public shame and discrimina­tion. Families often skimp on food and other necessitie­s to ensure children are dressed well enough to avoid being seen as disadvanta­ged.

Such children might have smartphone­s but not the money to buy a 100-yen (RM4.10) box of juice or participat­e in a school field trip, said Setsuko Ito, who heads the child-rearing-support division in Tokyo’s working-class Arakawa district.

Omura started her weekly dinner in Arakawa in 2014 to create a space to welcome children in the area who might not get enough support from their families, schools and communitie­s.

Her initiative, supported by donations and a grant from the district office, is meant to counter a void left as communitie­s hollow out and family ties unravel, leaving many parents and children isolated and struggling to cope. The kids and volunteers pay 300 yen (RM12.30) for dinner.

“I hope everyone can develop a sense that each child is our child and understand that we are raising the children who will be supporting us as the next generation,” she said.

Omura emphasised that the children who come to the dinners are not necessaril­y living in poverty.

In some cases, they just have to dine alone because their parents are working late.

Just over half of all Japanese single-parent households are considered to be under the poverty line.

Single mothers, who make on average 150,000 yen (RM6,157) a month, get limited support from welfare programmes.

Though a 2013 law aims to coordinate national and local government efforts to provide educationa­l, living and economic support, many local officials are struggling with the issue, said Kaori Suetomi, a professor specialisi­ng in education administra­tion and finance at Nihon University in Tokyo.

“Until now, Japan hasn’t really dealt with child poverty, and officials are not sure what to do,” said Suetomi, co-author of a recent report on policies devised by local government­s across Japan to address the issue.

The problem, she said, is budgets for those programmes are not guaranteed, so some local government­s have had to abandon programmes.

In addition, Suetomi said that child poverty issues overlap between the education and welfare ministries. That makes securing funds difficult as the ministries shuffle the responsibi­lity of which one should bear the cost, she said.

The “children’s cafeterias” are an attempt to fill that void.

Kazuma Omoto, a former participan­t and aspiring teacher who volunteers, said he attends to learn how to interact with younger children.

“It’s a wonderful place for that,” the high school junior said. “I come here every week. Going forward I hope I can study and learn many different things myself.”

 ?? – AP ?? A boy ladles curry into a plate at the cafetaria started by Misako Omura in Tokyo.
– AP A boy ladles curry into a plate at the cafetaria started by Misako Omura in Tokyo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia