Tuesday 9 December 2014

Challenged

The Black Pudding Saga


Ice skating with SHF 








Yesterday was our Christmas Survivor Day with the Sophie Hayes Foundation and we took some of the girls from our survivor network outdoor ice skating at the Natural History Museum and for dinner. 









What have I gotten myself into!? Blurgh.
Challenge accepted
Amidst all of this festive fun Adam (from SHF) decided it would be a good idea to set me challenge. I had to eat a bowl full of battered black pudding covered in HP sauce and in return ha said he’d donate £100 to my Mexico fund. I hate black pudding. Thinking that it would just be one piece (it was a starter) I hastily accepted, I mean it’s £100! But when it arrived it was in a bowl consisting of about 10 battered pieces of bloody, blackened mush. Adam happily helped out by smothering it in HP sauce (fun fact: he told us earlier in the day that HP sauce stands for Houses of Parliament sauce) and everyone sat and stared while I scoffed these not so delicate morsels.


Adam didn't miss a bite




Adam helped out by explaining the process for making and ingredients of black pudding – congealed blood and basically all of the left over animal bits. I don’t even know how true this is but it certainly helped me get through them…







The full experience
It was a great day of festive fun and I made £100 off of it for the Mexico partnership, but it won’t help to convince me to eat black pudding again anytime soon!


Challenge completed 


















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Donate here with the message EL POZO to support my work in Mexico 

Friday 5 December 2014

Mexico partnership

Building a Partnership



Trafficked
I first heard about the Sophie Hayes Foundation when I met with Congresswoman Rosi Orozco during my time in Mexico City. After an in-depth discussion about trafficking in Mexico – legislation, awareness, support etc. she then turned the table by asking me if I knew about the trafficking situation in the UK. I had to admit, I’d been so engrossed in ‘global trafficking’ – the UN protocol, the UNODC and US department of state reports and their impact on Mexico, I’d completely overlooked the situation in my own country. Rosi explained to me that Sophie was the first trafficking survivor in the UK to have her story publicised through the media and fully told in her book Trafficked, which Rosi gave me to read after our meeting. So this is where it all began. Upon my return to the UK I completed my dissertation then read Sophie’s book. Ashamed of being so unaware of the situation in the UK I began expanding my research by looking into trafficking in the UK and the action that was being taken (probably mostly as a form of ‘productive procrastination’ to avoid any more dissertation writing).


I got in touch with the Sophie Hayes Foundation who failed to reply to me for the next three months (I now understand that this is because the organisation is completely volunteer-led and resources/capacity are therefore limited, something I tried to rectify during my internship). However, after three long months of unemployment, temp work and looking into UK trafficking organisations and internships I eventually got an invite to their Volunteer Day.


SHF exhibition. Survivor voices. 

Unsure of what to expect I headed to the Day and learnt what the organisation was about, being reminded of Sophie’s Story and the importance of the Survivor Voice, which is so often ignored. Then and there I pitched myself. I told them that I was looking for an internship and how I had come to find them and voila! They welcomed the idea of full time assistance and as I was talking to Adam (the Research branch lead) he knew he could put me straight to work on completing the research report on aftercare that had been in the works for far too long.



Skipping forward a few months, as I have already discussed I knew after going to Mexico and meeting so many incredible people that I needed to return and get more involved in work directly in the combat of trafficking. Knowing Sophie’s connection with Mexico and linking it with my passion to return we decided that establishing an international partnership was the obvious way forward. We decided that El Pozo de Vida was the perfect combination: survivor-focused and extending over wider projects where the needs of the country lie and where their capacity and strengths can meet these needs.

Notting Hill Carnival - embracing different cultures.

How the partnership is going to look is still being work out but it will mostly exist as a means to learn from one another and to adapt on a local and global scale. By offering a platform for survivor voices and combining our skills across the organisations we will be create a joined-up approach to combatting trafficking. This partnership will be explore in the run-up to Mexico and during my time there, presenting how it begins and evolves with the hope of giving guidance to other organisations and eventually
establishing a greater international network of partnerships to combat trafficking.

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Donate here with the message EL POZO to support my work in Mexico