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UK
Registered Charity No. 1098651
ANDY LANES FOUNDATION
for Pakistani children in need
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| Masuma | Salik | Andy Lanes |
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| Hasan | Norman | Shaun & Mohsin |
BIRTH OF ALF
As many of you know, Andy Lanes was the Managing Director of 3M Pakistan for four years from 1997 to 2001. We had to return to the UK when he was diagnosed with cancer. When it became obvious that Andy was not going to survive this cruel disease he said that he would like someone to benefit from his death. Much though he loved flowers, money would be more useful to help children in need back in Pakistan where we had been so happy.
Family and
friends gave generously in memory of
Andy and the suggestion was made that a charity should be set up in his
name. That charity has now been registered
as Registered Charity
Number 1098651 with the UK Charity Commission and is known as ALF, Andy
Lanes
Foundation for Pakistani children in need.
The obvious place to start the work of ALF in Pakistan was Dar-ul-Sukun, a home for mentally and physically handicapped children in Karachi. During the four years we lived in Karachi I had become a regular visitor to Dar-ul-Sukun and had come to know and love the children there. Andy and members of his 3M staff and other friends helped me in my efforts to improve the lives of the children.
The
children
are
fortunate
to
be
alive but much
can be done to improve the quality of their lives.
Dar-ul-Sukun needs people with the time and the skills to
improve the
quality of their lives in every area –medical, therapeutic, hygiene,
diet,
education and social interaction (talking and cuddling!). ALF wanted to
raise
money to provide these experts.
For 12 months
ALF did provide a paediatric
doctor but, after 18 months of painstaking discussion, explanation and
persuasion, it was made obvious that the administrators of DUS were
unprepared
to accept any further input of trained help.
They would accept “material things” but no more.
As ALF had promised donors that their money would make a real
difference
to the lives of disadvantaged children the time had come to look
elsewhere for a
worthwhile cause.
We did not have
to look too far!
Many of our friends had contributed to the medical expenses for
operations to enable a little boy called Mohsin to walk.
Mohsin was born with dislocated hips and club feet.
He is perfectly normal mentally (in fact as bright as a button)
but was
living at Dar-ul-Sukun because of his handicap.
The operations enabled him to walk though he is still lame.
In my efforts to find him a suitable home, one where he could
achieve his
potential, I discovered the Karachi SOS Village.
The SOS Village
is a haven of peace and
tranquility and fun and laughter for 160 orphans.
The children live in cottages in the village compound.
Each cottage has approximately 10 children and one “Mama” who
cares
for them. Most of the children have
never slept in beds before or had access to clean running water, taps
and
toilets, much less regular cooked meals. Here
they
each
have
their
own
bed
and cupboard, 5 boys in one room with bathroom
and
5 girls in another. Every day they
go to the SOS School which is built adjacent to the Village.
The school is so well run that many families from the local
community
also send their children there. After
school the children go home to “Mama’s” home cooking.
Extra tuition is provided for any child who needs it and the
children are taken up to matriculation. They
are
encouraged
to
go
as
far
with their education as their abilities allow.
The children have a home at the Village until they are able to
stand on
their own feet and support themselves; just as we do with our own
children.
Within the safety of the Village walls the children can learn
and play,
whether it be English, Maths, cricket, football, scouting, sewing,
computers or
the Koran.
It is into this
caring environment of new
brothers and sisters and a “Mama” that Mohsin has been accepted.
At the end of his first year he was 4th in his class
and happy
and contented in the stimulating, challenging and safe home provided by
the SOS
Village.
ALF had found its worthwhile cause but how could it help? >>CLICK HERE<<