Showing posts with label Chidren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chidren. Show all posts

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Obama: 'I have been an imperfect father'


Two days before the inauguration, PARADE published a letter from Barack Obama to his daughters about what he hoped for them and all the children of America. The letter attracted international attention. On this Father's Day, we asked the President to reflect on what fatherhood means to him.

As the father of two young girls who have shown such poise, humor, and patience in the unconventional life into which they have been thrust, I mark this Father’s Day — our first in the White House — with a deep sense of gratitude. One of the greatest benefits of being President is that I now live right above the office. I see my girls off to school nearly every morning and have dinner with them nearly every night. It is a welcome change after so many years out on the campaign trail and commuting between Chicago and Capitol Hill.

But I observe this Father’s Day not just as a father grateful to be present in my daughters’ lives but also as a son who grew up without a father in my own life. My father left my family when I was 2 years old, and I knew him mainly from the letters he wrote and the stories my family told. And while I was lucky to have two wonderful grandparents who poured everything they had into helping my mother raise my sister and me, I still felt the weight of his absence throughout my childhood.

As an adult, working as a community organizer and later as a legislator, I would often walk through the streets of Chicago’s South Side and see boys marked by that same absence — boys without supervision or direction or anyone to help them as they struggled to grow into men. I identified with their frustration and disengagement — with their sense of having been let down.

In many ways, I came to understand the importance of fatherhood through its absence — both in my life and in the lives of others. I came to understand that the hole a man leaves when he abandons his responsibility to his children is one that no government can fill. We can do everything possible to provide good jobs and good schools and safe streets for our kids, but it will never be enough to fully make up the difference.

That is why we need fathers to step up, to realize that their job does not end at conception; that what makes you a man is not the ability to have a child but the courage to raise one.

As fathers, we need to be involved in our children’s lives not just when it’s convenient or easy, and not just when they’re doing well — but when it’s difficult and thankless, and they’re struggling. That is when they need us most.

And it’s not enough to just be physically present. Too often, especially during tough economic times like these, we are emotionally absent: distracted, consumed by what’s happening in our own lives, worried about keeping our jobs and paying our bills, unsure if we’ll be able to give our kids the same opportunities we had.

Our children can tell. They know when we’re not fully there. And that disengagement sends a clear message — whether we mean it or not — about where among our priorities they fall.
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Saturday, June 20, 2009

Obama and daughters snack on frozen custard


The first family was in the mood for something sweet — something like vanilla custard, fudge and sprinkles.

On a muggy Saturday just before Sunday's Father's Day holiday, President Barack Obama took Sasha, 8, and Malia, 10, to The Dairy Godmother, a frozen custard shop just outside Washington.

The president snacked on vanilla custard with hot fudge and toasted almonds in a cup, said the shop's owner, Liz Davis. Sasha ordered a brownie sundae treat with vanilla custard, hot fudge and chocolate sprinkles. Malia walked out of the shop, eating the remains of a waffle cone with vanilla frozen custard.
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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Netbook For Kids Puts Disney Back In PC Business


The Disney Netpal, built by mini-laptop specialist Asus, is scheduled to be available in late July through Toys "R" Us and Amazon.

Walt Disney Co. on Wednesday introduced a netbook for kids, marking the entertainment company's return to the PC business after trying to sell a Disney-themed desktop five years ago.

The Disney Netpal, built by mini-laptop specialist Asus, is scheduled to be available in late July through Toys "R" Us and Amazon.com for a manufacturer-suggested retail price of $350. The system is designed for children between the ages of 6 and 12.

The laptop has an 8.9-inch display, Wi-Fi capabilities, kid-friendly software, and lots of parental-control options. The system runs Windows XP Home, is powered by an Intel Atom N270 processor, and includes 1 GB of system memory and a 160-GB hard drive. There's also a built-in 0.3-megapixel camera.

The Netpal has more than 40 parental-control options. Parents can preselect e-mail correspondence options and set up filters to limit access to only certain Web sites. More sites can be added, but only if the parent submits the request through the PC's password-protected system. Parents also can pull up data to determine where children spend time, and for how long.

Besides introducing children to mobile computing, the Netpal is a marketing tool for Disney. The PC's software features Disney characters and icons and includes Disney-themed e-mail and browser.

The Netpal marks the second time Disney has taken a stab at the PC business. The Hollywood studio in 2004 launched a $900 desktop called the "Disney Dream Desk PC," built by Germany's Medion AG, a large private-label maker of PCs.

While Disney has yet to be successful in the PC business, the company has a large portfolio of consumer electronics for kids, including TVs, DVD players, alarm clock radios, and boom boxes. However, the company's consumer products unit has not done well in the economic downturn, posting a 9% decline in sales in the fiscal second quarter, according to Reuters news agency.

The Netpal initially will be released in the United States, but Disney plans to make it available in Europe and Asia by the end of the year.
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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

How To Help Your Children Understand Death


Most children live in an idyllic world of saturday cartoons and the loving care of their parents. Unfortuantely, there comes a time when a child will experience death for the first time and it becomes the responsibility of parents to educate their young children on the subject of death and dying...

Most children do experience death in one form or another during their childhood, be it losing a pet, a family member, or something else.

1. Make Your Discussion Easy To Understand

Don't avoid talking about death with your children, nor should you explain it in such a way that would instill a fear of death. Most children, however, have never seen a real dead body or have had a lengthy discussion with their parents about what, if anything, happens after we die.

2. Strategies For Talking About Death

Explaining an idea such as death is different from explaining something physical that your children are able to see, taste or touch. Try and explain things from the simplest level you can. If you wish, you can use this as an opportune time to go over the other big talk you will need to have with your children.

3. Essential Tips For Helping Children Through Loss

- Children sometimes ask when they will be able to see their loved one again
- No matter how small your childs pet be sure to give a proper funeral
- Often, children will express themselves through actions rather than words
- Never mislead children by telling them the deceased will come back
- Encourage children to share their feelings

Most importantly it is critical that you keep talking to your child. Keep the lines of communication open by asking them how they are feeling. Sometimes children will have nightmares about death or losing someone and it's important to talk through these dreams. Some children try to hide their confusion and sadness, and it's important to see beyond the surface and get them to open up to you. Just because they are children does not mean that they don't feel things deeply. If a child keeps their pain and confusion bottled up, it will come back to haunt them in later years.

4. Inform Children At An Early Age

Children should be given ample time to mull over the concepts of life and death in their minds. Do not wait until their pet dies in order to explain the subjects of death and dying to your children. Although death is a certainty of life, your children should not have to be scared or confused because of it.
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Sunday, April 26, 2009

UN envoy warns of dangers to children eastern DR Congo


The United Nations envoy tasked with protecting the rights of children in armed conflict today warned of the dire security situation in some parts of strife-torn eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Radhika Coomaraswamy, Special Representative of the Secretary-General, told reporters in New York that during her week-long visit to the DRC earlier this month the security situation “seemed less tense and more programmes were evident with regards to children” than two years ago, especially in the North Kivu capital of Goma.

However, in the Province Orientale town of Dungu, “a dire security situation exists,” with almost 1,000 children killed and some 300 abducted since last September by the Lords Resistance Army (LRA), the Ugandan militia notorious for seizing children to use as soldiers and sex slaves.

“Most of the schools [in the area have been] attacked and destroyed by the LRA,” said Ms. Coomaraswamy, underscoring the need to beef up security and to ensure that security personnel themselves do not commit grave violations.

Minors make up almost half the victims of sexual violence and 64 per cent of the perpetrators are men in uniform, noted the Special Representative. “The issue of impunity was the central question on the minds of people in civil society and the children themselves and the need for justice mechanisms to work.”

She emphasized that the reintegration of child soldiers into their families remained the focus of child protection teams in the area, noting that in the last month alone, some 1,300 child soldiers had been demobilized from the mainly Tutsi rebel militia, known as the National Congress for People’s Defence (CNDP), in North Kivu.

But concerns remain that many children are passing through into the ranks of the newly integrated Congolese Forces (FARDC).

“In fact when I arrived at the airport in Masisi, the Mai Mai [a rebel group] commanders wearing FARDC uniforms had bought with them four children as part of their troops and the child protection actors in our team actually separated them,” she said.

Referring to the latest annual report of the Secretary-General on Children and Armed Conflict, Ms. Coomaraswamy said, “we have also urged that the Security Council move towards setting up a system for setting sanctions against the 19 persistent violators who continue to recruit and use children.”

The Secretary-General’s report to the Security Council explicitly lists in its annexes 56 parties, both State and non-State, who have committed grave violations against children, including the 19 persistent violators who have been listed for more than 4 years.

The report also documents grave violations against children in 20 countries: Afghanistan, Burundi, CAR, Chad, Colombia, Côte d’Ivoire, DRC, Georgia, Haiti, Iraq, Lebanon, Myanmar, Nepal, Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel, the Philippines, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Thailand and Uganda.

Ms. Coomaraswamy stressed that the child protection community was waiting for a strong signal from the Council on its commitment to tackle the protection of children during armed conflict when it discusses the report on 29 April.
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Sunday, February 15, 2009

UNICEF seeks $1 billion to aid women and children in crises


The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) today appealed for over $1 billion to fund its emergency relief operations as thousands of vulnerable women and children die on a daily basis from hunger, disease, violence and poverty in crises that are mostly overlooked.

“Of the more than nine million children under the age of five who die each year, malnutrition is a contributing cause in a third of those deaths,” said UNICEF Executive Director Ann M. Veneman.

“Sadly, their deaths go largely unnoticed,” Ms. Veneman added at a press conference in Geneva, launching UNICEF’s 2009 Humanitarian Action Report (HAR), which highlights the plight of women and children around the globe in humanitarian emergencies and is used as the agency’s annual funding appeal.

Ms. Veneman said that the report demonstrates that more must be done to help the millions of children and women whose lives are impacted by conflict, natural disasters and other humanitarian crises including epidemics and hunger.

“UNICEF is requesting just over $1 billion to provide children and women in 36 countries with life-saving assistance. This includes medicine, clean water, hygiene, nutrition, temporary shelter and safe places for learning,” said Ms. Veneman.

This year’s funding appeal is 17 per cent higher than in 2008, largely because of increased needs in eastern and southern Africa.

Over half the funds are to continue UNICEF operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Somalia, Sudan, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

In Zimbabwe, the economy is crumbling with the highest inflation rate in the world, the cholera outbreak is out of control, over half the population is receiving food aid and basic social services are collapsing.

“The cholera outbreak has already killed thousands of people. Since I left [Zimbabwe] just over a week ago the number [of infected] has risen from around 42,000 to over 57,000. The deaths have risen from 2,200 to over 2,800,” Ms. Veneman told the press.

The UNICEF report highlights recent studies warning that the risk of hunger could increase for some 50 million people worldwide by 2010 as a result of climate change.

“An estimated one billion people lack access to adequate nutrition. It is a silent emergency that desperately requires immediate resources and sustained solutions,” said Ms. Veneman.

Some experts have estimated that in the next decade children and women will represent 65 per cent of all those affected by climate-related disasters, making some 175 million children victims of climate change.

The emergencies described in the Humanitarian Action Report represent only a small fraction of UNICEF’s activities. Between 2005 and 2007, the agency responded to 276 humanitarian emergencies in 92 countries each year.

Over half of the emergencies were caused by disasters, while 30 per cent were a result of conflict, and 19 per cent were health-related crises, such as epidemics.

“These funds will help UNICEF respond effectively and efficiently to the needs of children affected by emergencies,” in over 150 countries where it has a presence, said the agency’s Executive Director, adding that “As a result the lives of many will be saved.”
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