Tuesday, August 29, 2006

The Street kids of Ulaanbaatar

(NOTE: sorry folks, but i changed my blog over to something called BETA blog, which has enabled me to change my font colour to blue, very useful, but now i can't post photos! i'm hoping this will be sorted v soon because i have some good ones from the weekend...)

Yesterday I took some homeless kids out to dinner. One of them was gently hassling me for money as I was going home, but I’ve seen them around my building before and I know they are pretty nice kids. So I arranged to meet them in half an hour, four of them, to go to Zochin Buuz – a local café that serves cheap Mongolian food.

When I came outside in half an hour there was noone there, I was a bit puzzled. I stood at our meeting point for a minute and then saw my favourite kid come running towards me, and behind him…. a whole lot of other people! Including a gangly teenager, a girl, three different kids and two of the original kids, and a baby – being carried by a man in a wheelchair!

Oh boy! The kids were so happy and smiling I couldn’t say no. the man in the wheelchair didn’t come with us, but there we were 8 of us walking along the street towards the café.

When we got there this other kid, an early teenager who was very pushy and rude and gruff and with a loud hacking cough… joined us. He was different to the others. He was aggressive and unpleasant. I said that he wasn’t with us to the waitress, but he sat down anyway and the other kids were too nice or scared to tell him to get lost.

Before we ordered I told them that we had a total of 10,000 (about $10) to spend. So the rough kid bosses everyone about and unbeknownst to me orders buuz for everyone and then two massive serves of roasted ribs for himself. This brought the budget over 10,000. I was annoyed with him, as were all the other kids. When his ribs arrived he was sooooo disgusting in the way he was eating, like an animal – gulping and slurping and tearing the meat apart with his hands and slopping food onto the table. I tried to tell him that he should share with the other kids, but he wasn’t having it. He also ordered buuz for himself. After eating some of the ribs he ordered one of the waitresses to bring him a plastic bag and told one of the kids to put the ribs in the bag. He then proceeded to slurp some cabbage salad off the table and drink the rest of my juice!

While he was eating it was so disgusting and all the kids were looking at me and we shared little giggles between us about how gross he was. Whenever he was away from table (demanding something from the waitresses) they looked to me, concerned and showed waggled their little fingers at me which means ‘he’s a bad person’. I should have said ‘meddish-tei!’ which means ‘I know!’ emphatically. But I nodded and tried to give them a reassuring look that I knew they weren’t like that.

They were so lovely and looking after the baby, feeding him one buuz at a time, and giving him apple juice to drink. Sharing the care duties. They would all be under 10 years old apart from the gangly teenager. They all ate very carefully and politely.

After stuffing his face, the rough kid started pulling buuz off the other kids plates. Little shit. I stopped him taking one, but he just took one off another. Then we he decided to leave, he went and got another plastic bag and told all the kids to put their buuz that they hadn’t yet had time to eat into the bag. I was so angry at what was going on but powerless to do anything about it… and these kids were obviously scared of him. It was a real shame and kind of spoilt the moment. But I am sure they all had plenty to eat and I will always pleasantly remember those lovely kids and how much they appreciated the food and how they said ‘thank you’ in their best English as they left.

The experience of the interaction with the rough kid highlighted how tough it must be living on the streets. A real animal brutish-ness ruled that table today and I felt completely out of my depth. I have no idea how those other kids survive and remain so good-natured. I admire them deeply and I hope that they have somewhere nice and warm to sleep tonight. I can’t even imagine what it must be like and I recognise that I am way too privileged in this life. I can’t make resolution in my mind about why I have so much and others have so little. And I don’t know what I can do about it except small things like this.

There is a large population of homeless people in Ulaanbaatar. There are the usual reasons that you get homeless people in any city – mental illness, economic stress, alcoholism etc. But apparently there was a massive accumulation of homeless people that started at the time of the changeover from communist state to democracy, in the early 1990’s. Mongolian friends don’t talk much about how difficult things were but small snippets that I have been told are that things completely fell apart. People lost their jobs, there was no food to be found in the shops and many people were pushed to the edge and beyond. Alcoholism exploded and homelessness was created.

In wintertime Mongolia is a very very harsh place to be homeless. Homeless kids in Ulaanbaatar live in the underground heating tunnels. So many of them have burns on their skin. It’s a very sad situation. There are some services to help these kids, but so many of them can’t get help or don’t fit into the system and end up living on the streets permanently, if they don’t get chucked in jail. Mongolians are generally suspicious of people that live on the streets and often tell me that they are ‘scared’ of them. There is not much sympathy on offer from the average Mongolian. I think it’s a cultural thing. Children or those who can’t take care of themselves are meant to have families to take care of them. If they are outside of that, people are suspicious or don’t know how to treat them.

Anyway, I hope that next time we can manage to avoid having that rough kid eat with us and have a more pleasant experience!

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

What a touching story...your kindness to the kids was a blessing to them, and you are special to have done it!

Lisa said...

Hi Julia:
I don't know that I would have done anything differently than what you did. Those kids sound like good souls who need some kindness. The bully - I don't understand it either but you've got a point that maybe the homelessness turns on the animal instinct, but it is interesting that the other kids were kind and polite. Thank you for extending yourself in this way. All humans benefit when one extends kindness to another, even though we don't receive it directly, it effects the planet in a positive way.

Julia said...

i also believe in the theory that doing positive things releases positive energy into the world. i like to try and at least keep the balance of my actions positive. the thing i realised after this post was my lack of sympathy for the rough kid. bullys are usually the way they are because of the way they have been treated themselves and when you experience a bully personally its easy to forget that.

Sophie said...

Hi Julia,

My name is Sophie, I found your blog through Catalin's, and I am really enjoying reading through it. I am a friend of Catalin's from Katherine.
I also have a blog if you want to check it out. ( I am currently living in the USA) inspiredwandering.blogspot.com

Thanks for all the honest, insightful and beautiful stories,

Sophie