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Bahia Street: | ||
From April through June, 2006, we will be supporting Bahia Street a non-profit girls school which seeks to end the cycle of poverty in the shantytowns of Salvador, Brazil. Here you can read about the urban slums of Brazil, Bahia Street's wonderful, and success stories from some of the girls they've helped. | ||
Breaking the cycle of poverty
The Bahia Street Center has fourteen full and part-time staff who are all (except for the English teacher) African-Brazilian university graduates from the shantytowns or rural Bahia. This gives them a unique understanding of the issues the girls face as well as understanding the importance of the social change the Bahia Street program is effecting. In its outreach program, Bahia Street provides space and assistance for community forum meetings and for local groups working against violence, poverty and inequality and for peace and social justice. They also offer literacy classes, family counseling and emergency small loans to the students’ parents and caregivers. Bahia Street gives these girls an opportunity to become leaders in the outside world as well as in their own communities. The public schools they attend are weak in academics; because our students receive additional schooling through Bahia Street, they quickly rise to the top of their public school classes and become leaders there. Other students turn to them for help and tutoring. Their public school teachers say the Bahia Street girls are an inspiration for themselves and their students. As a result, the girls gain self-confidence and leadership skills. For the last three years, all of the girls who have taken their end of year exams passed with grades of eighty percent or higher. (Each year a few miss the exam due to illness or other traumatic events such as rape, murder or other violence to themselves or those they love.) This is an incredible achievement considering that nearly all of these girls are illiterate when they begin the Bahia Street program. Bahia Street provides education classes through the equivalent of the eighth grade. At that time, the girls study to take an exam to enter a quality high school that is free for those who can pass the exam. So far, all five Bahia Street girls who have taken the exam have passed.
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