The Invisible Children

This feature was written and commissioned for www.yano.co.uk, who describe themselves as “the new website for fresh thinking on parenting”.
It is frightening, shocking and deeply disturbing that even in these enlightened days, even in this civilised country, thousands of children can become invisible. And their invisibility can put them into the gravest danger. We have seen cases that have made headlines recently as the evidence was revealed in court of children being plied with drugs and alcohol and then used as sex slaves. This has happened, not in the back streets of third world slums where these children were be living in rubbish dumps or starving. It happened to ordinary children living in our own towns and cities.
How is it that children like these suffer such a terrible fate? The cloak of invisibility that surrounds them seems to have been fashioned out of adult indifference. They ‘bunk off’ school and nobody notices. They run away from care and no one can restrain them. They sleep rough and nobody seems to take responsibility for them, or ask questions, or even search for them and find a safe refuge for them.
We sometimes hear from these children at ChildLine. One girl I know well ran away when she was eleven from her mother’s alcoholism and violence. She stayed on a bus until it was dark and she had run out of money, and then rang ChildLine, the children’s helpline. The first time she, and we, were lucky; we found a bed for her in the only children’s refuge in London. The next day she was placed in foster care, but when that placement broke down, she ran away again and rang ChildLine once more.

This time we were not so lucky and were not able to locate a place for her, so she promised she would go home. In fact she slept in a local park overnight. I dread to think what could have happened to her. Happily she survived, rang ChildLine in the morning, and from then on was looked after. Although there were other crises in her life, each time she rang our helpline we were able to empower her and inspire her to move forward. Now she is married, with children of her own and has a thriving career working for a children’s charity. She is a wonderful success story, but how many others end up in our prisons, or addiction units, or dying in A & E with no one to mourn their passing?

It is estimated that 100,000 children run away from their homes, or from care each year in the UK – but nobody really knows the true figure. Railway Children is one of the most effective charities which supports children living on the streets, the children most of us pass by without a glance in their direction. According to Railway Children, two-thirds of runaways will be victims of violence on the streets and few are reported missing by their parents or carers in the first place. It’s not enough to suggest that the police should pick them up and return them home.
When a child runs away there can be a very good reason. And yet they may be too ashamed or fearful to tell the police what that reason is. And what happens if they do tell? One of the most appalling aspects of the recent case of teenage girls abused by gangs of predatory men is that when one did ask for help, and reported the abuse, she was not believed.
It is clear that we urgently need to open our eyes and ears. We need to see and hear the children before the moment when their desperation forces them onto the streets. Many of these children know what they are running from but have no idea what perils they are running towards.

I talked to a girl who was running away to Piccadilly but paused to ring ChildLine. She was in floods of tears so she could hardly find the words to explain what had driven her from home. Eventually she explained that she had just discovered her own adoption papers. Her parents had never revealed to her that she had been adopted. “I realise now that they could never have loved me,” she said. “They never told me the truth.” As I asked more questions she painted a picture of parents who deeply cared about her. I suggested to her idea that parents can make mistakes and that sometimes children need to forgive them. She said she had run away before and met a man who offered to let her work for him in Piccadilly, but another girl had warned her to go home. At the end of our conversation she said she would return home and talk to her mother about the adoption that they had never discussed before. I will never know if she went back. I pray that she did. Otherwise she might have ended up like so many of our invisible children, believing no one knew or cared how she lived or if she lived at all.

If you would like more information about these charities or want to get involved visit www.childline.org.uk or call 0800 1111. www.railwaychildren.org.uk or call 01270 757596.

1 thought on “The Invisible Children”

  1. “100,000 children run away from their homes, or from care each year in the UK”

    A poor reflection on the adults in our society and especially those paid and charged to protect these children.

    I have heard from “looked after children” many times how they ran away from “care” because of rape, torture, abuse, etc, called childline and then found themselves in front of their own social worker in the morning and being sent back to the abuse. So they run again and again because many social workers do not listen or believe these children.

    I heard a caring teacher warn a boy how being in care means he is a target- to be stolen at noon, sold at auction in Amsterdam by 6pm and in Middle East by the following morning either as sex slave or for body parts.

    Children do not run from love.

    I have heard social workers refer to children as disposable kids, troubled children, etc but have no real interest in helping them, simply drawing a salary.

    I look back at Victorian times and see how UK treated its children, seen and not heard, shitbags, etc.

    So where did this attitude towards children come from, that adult society as a whole cares less if they are raped, tortured, sold for sex etc.?

    Is it from the old religions that see children as evil, because they are born of Evil Eve and are here to suffer for the sin of being born of her?

    Because there is something in the collective consciousness of Britain that treats its animals better than its children.

    I know many Japanese and Russian people who notice this when visiting UK.

    We all have to ask why do child protectors see children as liars, when statistics show children rarely lie?

    Why does childline refer the children back to the social worker they are escaping from without asking more questions?

    Why do child “protectors” treat children as not being fully human, just because they are small in size?

    Dehumanize any group in society and you can commit any amount of atrocities as we know from SS Germany etc.

    Using Best interest of the Child is also a phrase that needs to be replaced urgently as it carries the same energy signature as SS Nazi Germany…..we know what they did to children in their best interests …and again why children used in all kinds of horrific experiments, deprived of Mother love- Lebensraum Program.

    Today, the number of children reporting how they are not allowed to tell their mothers they love them is horrifying. Mothers are told that saying I love you to children in corporate care is emotional abuse.

    Lots to do to make all children visible.

    Reply

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