Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Without getting into this much further... Living in Ecuador, and having spent time in the Quito dump.... I can tell you that there is no quick, easy solution to the problem. People live and work in the dump for lots of reasons. Birth control is touted as a solution to poverty and hunger by several prominent organizations who think they know better. No kids, no poverty. Unfortunately the poorer one is, the more likely they are to want to have kids since children are seen as a source of income either now or when one is to old to earn a living. Ask a person in the dump about their retirement plan??? If one looks at U.S. history in farming regions going back a couple of generations, one will remember that it was common place to have 5 or 6 kids, We had a neighbor who had 12... This is rather rare these days. Good grief, what would it cost to send 12 kids through College??? (or to get this on-topic, buy an M-6 for each one for graduation : ) ) In Ecuador, amoung rural communities with little income, people have large families, those in the city with better income generally now have only 2, Why??? Because they realize it costs money to have children, to send them to school, buy clothes etc... They want to spend money on a new car or TV or a nicer house and a vacation at Disney World. Poor families see kids sort of like cows, the more you have, the more milk you get and the more money you earn. The only way poor families survive in Ecuador is by pooling family resources and that includes the kids shining shoes or begging out in the streets. Kids whose parents have decent jobs go smoke cigarettes at the mall or get involved in after school activities. Tina's project avoids a lot of the difficult social problems of people who live in and around the dump by concentrating on the children. Hopefully breaking the cycle by giving them an education which will allow them to one day leave the dump and other problems. If it were just about teaching photography to people in the dump, this project would be a waste of time, (I wrote a post on the lug saying so before I bothered to check it out...and I feel still stupid for doing so.) But it's not. It's really a program to get kids into school and keep them there. Education leads to economic developement which leads to population control. Not the other way around. Duane Duane's Photographs of Ecuador http://duane_birkey.tripod.com