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Lifting the lid on the joy a shoebox brings

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  • Lifting the lid on the joy a shoebox brings

    The Scotsman, UK
    Dec 30 2004

    Lifting the lid on the joy a shoebox brings

    Lothian gifts delight children

    JANE BRADLEY


    STAFF at children's homes today told of the festive joy nearly 10,000
    shoeboxes sent from the Lothians brought to deprived young people in
    Eastern Europe.

    The 9837 boxes, packed with toys, sweets and warm clothing, were sent
    to Azerbaijan and Romania to give poor children a Christmas to
    remember.

    Collected through annual charity drive Operation Christmas Child, the
    boxes - packed by people in schools, community groups, churches and
    individuals across Edinburgh and the Lothians - have been handed out
    to children in homes, gypsy settlements and to others living on the
    streets.

    "It's nothing to us to fill a shoebox, but to the children, it's
    everything," said June Vasey, area representative for Samaritan's
    Purse, which runs Operation Christmas Child.

    Samaritan's Purse, an international foreign aid organisation, sends
    out boxes to 12 Eastern European countries.

    And this year, boxes collected in the Lothians have gone to children
    in Azerbaijan and Romania, where orphanages are filled with children
    abandoned by poverty-stricken mothers.

    Tension between ethnic Roma (gypsies) in the country and Romanians
    mean that Roma families find it difficult to get jobs.

    A vicious circle of poverty and petty crime has led many local
    governments to force Roma communities into out-of-town communes.

    Liviu Balas, director of Ecce Homo, a charity which runs a children's
    home and social centre to rehabilitate street children in
    Cluj-Napoca, in Transylvania, Romania, thanked the people of
    Edinburgh for their work.

    "I don't think anyone really can imagine how the children feel when
    they receive the shoeboxes," he said.

    "The people in Scotland are very good at giving the children what
    they would like and there have been some un- believable toys in the
    boxes.

    "One little boy, Alex, got a UFO with flashing lights and he just
    loves it - but we at the centre were amazed by it too."

    Ms Vasey said families in one village in Azerbaijan lived in wooden
    railway carriages.

    "Armenian families in Imishli first took shelter in the carriages
    when they were trying to get back to Armenia during the conflict with
    Azerbaijan, but they got stuck there."

    She said the charity, which also organises other projects in Eastern
    Europe throughout the year, runs soup kitchens for the railway
    carriage families during the winter.

    She added: "Temperatures are freezing cold in the winter and there
    are only two water pumps for the whole five-kilometre row.

    "We make sure there are some warm clothes in each of the shoeboxes.
    If people don't put them in when they donate the box, we add them
    from our store.

    She said the boxes were given to children in Romania as a Christmas
    present, but in predominantly Muslim Azerbaijan as general gifts.

    The boxes are taken to Eastern Europe on lorries accompanied by
    workers from Operation Christmas Child.
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