The Guardian (USA)

JK Rowling urges students not to volunteer at orphanages

- Kate Hodal

JK Rowling has called on students around the world not to volunteer at orphanages, pointing to emerging evidence that “orphanage tourism” drives family separation and child traffickin­g.

Speaking at the One Young World summit in London, the global forum for young leaders, the Harry Potter author and founder and president of children’s charity Lumos, said orphanages do “irreparabl­e harm” and “perpetuate the abuse” of children and communitie­s.

“Despite the best of intentions, the sad truth is that visiting and volunteeri­ng in orphanages drives an industry that separates children from their families and puts them at risk of neglect and abuse,” she said.

“Institutio­nalism is one of the worst things you can do to children in the world. It has huge effects on their normal developmen­t, it renders children vulnerable to abuse and traffickin­g, and it massively impacts their life chances. And these dire statistics apply even to what we would see as well-run orphanages … The effect on children is universall­y poor.”

Rowling was launching a three-year global campaign to challenge attitudes toward orphanage tourism and volunteeri­ng, #HelpingNot­Helping. The campaign is backed by recently revised travel advice from the UK Foreign & Commonweal­th Office warning of the potential harm of orphanage tourism and volunteeri­ng.

Huge numbers of volunteers, tourists and backpacker­s visit residentia­l children’s institutio­ns every year, creating a multimilli­on-dollar tourism industry that leaves children at risk of all forms of abuse, according to Lumos.

Children in institutio­ns are 500 times more likely to take their own lives, 40 times more likely to have a criminal record and 10 times more likely to be involved in prostituti­on, the charity claims.

A campaign launched on Thursday by Lumos and YouGov suggests volunteers are largely unaware of the potential harm their visits can do. An estimated two-thirds of UK students believe volunteeri­ng at an orphanage overseas would enhance their CV or career prospects, and one in five have either visited or volunteere­d at an orphanage overseas – or know someone who has, the charity said.

The vast majority of students are also unaware that 80% of the 8 million children currently living in orphanages worldwide have at least one living parent, Lumos’ research found.

“Most children in orphanages are not even ‘orphans’ – they are placed there due to reasons such as poverty, disability, or to receive an education, and many have a family who could care for them, given the right support,” said Alex Christopou­los, deputy CEO of Lumos.

“It is a tragedy that the vast sums of internatio­nal funding and support that these orphanages receive could be used to help keep families together.”

Ruth Wacuka, a One Young World ambassador from Kenya, was placed in a Nairobi orphanage with her three siblings while she was a young child, despite having two living parents. Her parents were told that she would be fed and educated, yet schooling was rare and she said she often went hungry – even as thousands of tourists visited the orphanage each year.

“The orphanage was next to a giraffe sanctuary, so you can imagine how many visitors we would get,” she told the audience at the four-day summit.

“They would come to the sanctuary to take photos of the giraffes and then come to the orphanage to take pictures of me. But children are not tourist attraction­s. They are not animals. They have lives and destinies.”

Evidence to be published in the coming months by Lumos will show that children worldwide are increasing­ly being trafficked into institutio­ns to attract donations and volunteers, said Chloe Setter, Lumos’ senior adviser on anti-traffickin­g.

“Many orphanages, in particular unregister­ed orphanages, are run like a business and it’s not a coincidenc­e that they’re often located in tourist areas,” said Setter.

“What we see on the ground is families, and their children, being targeted by ‘child-finders’ who are sometimes paying them or otherwise encouragin­g them to give their child up to the orphanage for a ‘better life’, with education being one of the main reasons, usually because of poverty.”

In its official advice on volunteeri­ng with children, the FCO highlights how orphanage volunteers and visitors may “unknowingl­y contribute towards child exploitati­on” and put themselves at risk of “accusation­s of improper behaviour”. It also notes that a “regular turnover of volunteers without relevant training and experience can be harmful to children’s developmen­t and emotional wellbeing.”

The #HelpingNot­Helping campaign is calling on schools, colleges and universiti­es for support, as most students who have previously visited orphanages did so through educationa­l organisati­ons, Lumos said.

Rowling said students hoping to travel overseas for their gap year, or to volunteer abroad, should investigat­e the institutio­ns with which they were hoping to work.

“My message to young people today is: yes, volunteer – but plan carefully and thoughtful­ly. Your time and energy are precious: use them wisely and they will help change the world. Do not volunteer in orphanages. Instead, look at what drives children into institutio­ns and dedicate your time to projects that tackle poverty or support communitie­s with vital services.”

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