Saturday, 30 January 2010

Summary of Children underground




This astonishingly intimate documentary follows five homeless children in Romania, where the collapse of communism has led to a life on the street for 20,000 children.

From a 16-year-old girl who runs her gang with a mixture of brutality and compassion, to a small, intelligent, and remarkably articulate 12-year-old boy, these children seem at first feral and frightening–yet over the course of the movie their loneliness, desperation, and glimpses of hope will transform how you perceive them.

Make no mistake: this is difficult watching. As Children Underground explores the meager state resources to support these children and follows some of the children back to their difficult families, the scope of the problem becomes larger and more irresolvable.

But this documentary offers an unblinking and deeply compassionate insight into the extremes of human existence; you will not forget it easily

Watch Children Underground

Part 1


Children Underground partea I
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Part 2


Children Underground partea II
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Part 3


Children Underground partea III
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Part 4


Children Underground partea IV
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Changes for the children




Some changes have taken place since the first showing of this film on BBC Four in September 2007. A team of Non Government Organisations (NGOs) is working with the government to bring about changes to the lives of disabled children growing up in the state institutes in Bulgaria. This NGO alliance is made up of teams who have been working on the ground in Bulgaria for years.

The children in the home in Mogilino have recently been assessed by a medical team, and rehabilitation plans are being put together for each child. Specialists like speech therapists and physiotherapists are being assigned to Mogilino to work with the children. In the long term the plan is to either build purpose-built small group care homes for the disabled - or to relocate the children to better environments with Day Care Centres and potential schooling.

Summary of Bulgaria's Abandoned Children

The Social Care Home - where 75 unwanted children are growing up - is the main employer in the small village of Mogilino. Few of the children can talk, not necessarily because they are unable but rather because no one has ever taught them how.

Director Kate Blewett visits a children's care home in Bulgaria and investigates the conditions in which the children live.

Following the completion of the film, the production team offered the Bulgarian Embassy in London the opportunity to comment on the findings made in the course of filming the documentary:


Kate meets the children in this tragic, silent world, such as Milan, the gentle giant who spends his days doing chores and watching over the others, and mildly autistic 18-year-old Didi, who is able to talk, and has plenty to say, but no one to speak to. The children that surround them suffer a variety of problems, many are blind or deaf and some are unable to leave their beds, many are literally wasting away.

Abandoned into the hands of the staff at Mogilino these children inhabit a bleak uncaring world, so devoid of normal everyday stimulus that many have taken to rocking slowly and constantly in their chairs just for something to do.

Bulgaria has more institutionalised mentally and physically disabled children than anywhere else in Europe. This film is a heart-rending and eye-opening look into the life of one such institution.

Watch Bulgaria's Abandoned Children


Watch Bulgaria's Abandoned Children [Part 1] in Entertainment View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com






Watch Bulgaria's Abandoned Children [Part 2] in Entertainment  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com

Summary of children of Leningradsky




Description
In post-Soviet Russia between 1 and 4 million children are homeless. At the time of filming, authorities estimated that some 30,000 of them were living on the streets of Moscow. Filmmakers Hanna Polak and Andrzej Celinski bring us the gritty and heartbreaking story. Escaping homes fraught with violence and neglect, the children sleep in stairways, garbage containers and underground tunnels. They make homes on hot water pipes to protect themselves from the harsh winter. They panhandle and prostitute themselves for money. They sniff glue to curb hunger and to escape from the world around them. Yet the spirit of a child is ever present, as they play with balloons, sing, dance and dream of their mothers. When Tanya, a beautiful 14-year-old homeless girl dies from a glue overdose, the magnitude and urgency of this issue become overwhelmingly apparent. Tanya's friend condemns her crying mother and blames her alcohol addiction for causing Tanya's death. This film explores the social ills and shortcomings of a country still struggling to live up to its democratic expectations. With English subtitles.

Watch The street children of Leningradsky


THE CHILDREN OF LENINGRADSKY 1 OF 2
by Top-Notch112


Friday, 29 January 2010

The street children of Leningradsky

When i first saw this i was shuck and had to make a few friend to watch it but no one i knew was really horrified by this, it was almost like the hole world just doesn't care for what they don't see on front of them.
I have family in Philippine and when i go to the town my family lives there are street kids every were smoking, drinking and sniffing glue and the people see them like rats.
I still remember when i was about ten a kid came up to me and ask for a drink when we was having our dinner at the road side in our van, he beg then showed me his leg, a big pies of flesh was missing to the point you can see the bone that shined bright white in the sun light.
The kid was no older than me at the time.

Saturday, 23 January 2010

Life funny jokes


I was going on a bus in Staines if you don't no were this place is it in England not that help allot and i went to the top of the bus, suddenly on the next stop all these school kids came on and one of them sat next to me. i felt abit hungry so i went into my bag and took out a banana, yes i do that i get sugar lows anyway the kid saw the banana and said "what is that"!!! And that people was the first time i had to tell a fellow human being what a banana was.
what are these kids learning how to breath in and out only by the sound of it.

Life funny jokes


A few weeks ago the health inspector came into my work to check and tell us the new way to be a clean safe paranoid chef in the kitchen and when she was talking i decided to do one of my stupid jokes. I raised my voice and said "when do we get our goggles so we can use it when we take a piss" and she look at me and said in a concerned way "i don't no when did you expect to have them come in" and returned my answers with "i don't no, soon i guest"?

One day we will look like this guy in the picture when we take a piss at work

Whisper



This is the link to watch the film http://www.novamov.com/video/4a928a8eae9d2

you might have to wait for a computer game ad stop playing and if that makes no sense count your self Lucky and if any problem leave a massage
Enjoy

Gummo



TO WATCH= http://www.megavideo.com/ep_gr.swf?v=43RNK33G
If there is a problem just leave a massage