Tara Winkler: Why we need to end the era of orphanages
Tara Winkler helps vulnerable children escape poverty and be cared for within their families. Full bio
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volunteering in a Cambodian orphanage
when I was 19 years old
through Southeast Asia.
surrounded by so much poverty
and donated some clothes and books
was desperately poor.
like that before in my life.
to do something more to help.
to Cambodia the following year
for a few months.
water filters and food
for the first time in their lives.
that I had been supporting
every cent donated to the orphanage,
were suffering such gross neglect
to feed themselves.
and sexually abusing the kids.
to turn my back on children
and the local authorities
and rescue the kids
another unexpected turn.
running an orphanage in Cambodia,
to speak Khmer fluently,
to speak the Khmer language fluently.
properly with the kids,
from the orphanage
had other living relatives,
living in an orphanage
of orphanages in Cambodia
living in Cambodian orphanages
living in these orphanages
living in orphanages
for a residential care institution.
by other names as well,
"children's homes," "children's villages,"
confined to Cambodia.
that have seen a dramatic increase
care institutions
being institutionalized.
living in institutions
1,600 percent since 1992.
by putting kids into institutions
and abusive institutions
of residential care.
research has shown us
of developing mental illnesses,
with an inability to reintegrate
without any model of family
to parent their own children.
large numbers of children,
before in Australia.
to our "Stolen Generations,"
who were removed from their families
that we could do a better job
would be like for a child.
rotation of caregivers,
to the shift every eight hours.
you have a steady stream of visitors
and affection you're craving
of abandonment,
in Australia, the USA, the UK anymore,
raised in institutions
to fall into sex work than their peers,
to have a criminal record,
eight million children around the world
80 percent of them are not orphans.
who could be caring for them
of so many children:
from people like me back in 2006,
and volunteer and donate,
that exploits children
that these institutions are largely set up
can most easily be lured in
in exchange for donations.
in the most popular tourist hotspots.
in support of these institutions,
are removed from their families
lessons the hard way,
an orphanage in Cambodia.
of humble pie to admit
a part of the problem.
and facilitated orphanage tourism
for my orphanage,
my orphanage was,
what they really needed:
incredibly depressing
and overcoming poverty
been led to believe it should be.
and preventable,
in favor of family-based care.
of Cambodian social workers,
families escape poverty.
some of the most vulnerable families
with its biological family,
that I showed you before?
to catch the ball?
and fiercely intelligent girl.
and abusive orphanage,
with her family.
her nursing degree at university.
that we have developed at CCT
by UNICEF Cambodia
to keep children in families.
that you can help to solve this problem
children a voice
for family-based care.
to the unnecessary institutionalization
and our donations
and residential care institutions
to keeping children in families.
in our lifetime,
developing communities thrive
children everywhere
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Tara Winkler - Child protection leader, activist, authorTara Winkler helps vulnerable children escape poverty and be cared for within their families.
Why you should listen
Tara Winkler is the co-founder and managing director of the Cambodian Children's Trust (CCT), established with Jedtha Pon in 2007 to rescue fourteen children from a corrupt and abusive orphanage.
Winkler has led CCT through a number of significant organizational changes, including the closure of the initial CCT orphanage in favor of a family-based care model of programs and services.
Winkler is the co-founder of Born to Belong Foundation, which provides a unified solution to the global orphanage crisis. Born to Belong Foundation runs innovative and ground-breaking programs in Cambodia, India, Nepal and Uganda to strengthen vulnerable families, reunite institutionalized children with their families, and provide kinship care and foster families for children in need of alternative care.
Winkler has been featured twice on ABC's "Australian Story" and once on "60 Minutes Australia." Her book How (Not) to Start an Orphanage, published by Allen & Unwin in April 2016, is currently being turned into a feature film.
Tara Winkler | Speaker | TED.com