Children
from middle class families do it here in New Zealand - they call it
dumpster diving.
The
Euro Legacy: In Greece, Children Pick Through Trash Cans For Food
18
April, 2013
"We
have reached a point where children are coming to school hungry,"
as with
an estimated 10% of Greek elementary and middle school students
suffering from 'food insecurity', the troubled nation has fallen to
the level of some African countries.
As the
NY Times reports,
unlike the US, Greek schools do not offer subsidized cafeteria
lunches. Exacerbated by the austerity measures including cuts in
subsidies for larger families, the cost has become insurmountable for
many. With 26% of Greek households on an 'economically weak diet',
children are starting to steal for food and picking through trash
cans as they proclaim, "our
dreams are crushed."
What is frightening is the speed at which it is happening, "a
year ago it wasn't like this," as one family talks of the
'cabbage-based diet' which it supplements by foraging for snails in
nearby fields. Programs are being started to help from wealthier
Greeks, but as one parent said, "unless
the EU acts, we're done for."
As
an elementary school principal, Leonidas Nikas is used to seeing
children play, laugh and dream about the future. But recently he has
seen something altogether different, something he thought was
impossible in Greece: children
picking through school trash cans for food; needy youngsters asking
playmates for leftovers; and an 11-year-old boy, Pantelis Petrakis,
bent over with hunger pains.
...
“Not
in my wildest dreams would I expect to see the situation we are in,”
Mr. Nikas said. “We have reached a point where children in Greece
are coming to school hungry. Today,
families have difficulties not only of employment, but of survival.”
...
Last
year, an estimated 10 percent
of Greek
elementary and middle school students suffered from what public
health professionals call “food insecurity,” ... “When it comes
to food insecurity, Greece has
now fallen to the level of some African countries,”
she said.
Unlike
those in the United States, Greek schools do not offer subsidized
cafeteria lunches. Students bring their own food or buy items from a
canteen. The cost has become
insurmountable for some families with little or no income.
...
...
classmates are frequently hungry, she said, and one boy recently
fainted. Some children were starting
to steal for food,
she added. While she does not excuse it, she understands their
plight. “Those who are well fed will never understand those who are
not,” she said.
“Our
dreams are crushed,”
added Evangelia, whose parents are unemployed but who is not in the
same dire situation as her peers. She paused, then continued in a low
voice. “They say that when
you drown, your life flashes before your eyes. My sense is that in
Greece, we are drowning on dry land.”
...
This
year the number of malnutrition cases jumped. “A year ago, it
wasn’t like this,” Ms. Perri, said, fighting back tears. “What’s
frightening is the speed at which it is happening.”
...
Mr.
Petrakis said he felt emasculated after repeatedly failing to find
new work. When food for the family ran low, he stopped eating almost
entirely, and rapidly lost weight.
“When
I was working last summer, I even threw away excess bread,” he
said, tears streaming down his face. “Now,
I sit here with a war running through my head, trying to figure out
how we will live.”
When
the hunger comes, Ms. Petrakis has a solution. “It’s simple,”
she said. “You get hungry,
you get dizzy and you sleep it off.”
A
2012 Unicef report showed that among the poorest Greek households
with children, more than 26
percent had an “economically weak diet.”
The phenomenon has hit immigrants hardest but is spreading quickly
among Greeks in urban areas where one or both parents are effectively
permanently unemployed.
...
He
has not found work for three years. Now, he said, his family is
living on what he called a “cabbage-based
diet,” which it supplements by foraging for snails in nearby
fields. “I
know you can’t cover nutritional basics with cabbage,” he said
bitterly. “But there’s no alternative.”
...
“I’m
not saying we should just wait for others to help us,” he said.
“But unless the European
Union acts
like this school, where families help other families because we’re
one big family, we’re done
for.”
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