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Still jet-lagged-in Kenya for less than six hours-I wandered into the small field near an elementary school where about sixty children played baseball and other typical children's games. They were waiting to eat lunch, which an older boy was cooking in two enormous pots over an open fire. For the next three months, this was where I would be every day, every morning, playing with these kids, loving them, holding the babies I saw tied to the backs of little girls as young as eight. I had only been there for three minutes and already my heart was broken at that sight.
That was my introduction to the world of Kenyan street kids, a phenomenon you see worldwide in un-developed nations. And they were everywhere. Once these kids knew my name, I'd hear it called in city streets miles from that field were we went every morning. Scholar Tobias Hecht, who works with street kids in Brazil, observed that street kids "subvert" the "social apartheid" that keeps the poor out of sight and out of mind (qtd. in Kilbride, p. 3). They go to the places where the rich and the tourists congregate in order to beg. They are a constant reminder-if one is willing to look at it-that there's something terribly wrong in the world. Yesterday, I read Street Children in Kenya, an anthropological treatise on the subject that explored all aspects of street children's lives. It brought back a lot of memories. I haven't found any histories on the phenomenon of street children, but I would guess that in African nations, street children emerged with the advent of colonialism. Prior to contact with Europeans, African communities were stitched tightly together. Although there was no "welfare" or "orphanages," the social structure of the society had a system for taking care of those needs. If a man died, his wives and children would be cared for-possibly by his brother, possibly by her family. With colonialism came a cash economy and cities. Men had to leave their wives to go to the cities to make money in order to pay taxes that were now required of them. Women had to go to cities to make money to help their families out; often, these women ended up in one or another form of prostitution. Sometimes they had children, who were raised in the city streets. I imagine from such sources, street children were born. From the rural areas, children might migrate to the cities in search of work or because one or both parents had gone.
The copyright of the article African Street Children in African History is owned by . Permission to republish African Street Children in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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