Why do we go to the Pacific?
While
beautiful beaches adorn these Islands, and tourism businesses boom,
indigenous population, among whom the Deaf are to be found, still
do not benefit from the abundance of this natural resources. Many
families are barely able to provide school lunches and daily transportation
to school for their children. Families with children living with
disabilities are most affected. Stigma and misconceptions, wrongly
attached to the disability of deafness, further aggravated the situation
for Deaf people.
 |
Around 50,000 children have
no access to formal education |
 |
Hundreds live in remote villages reached
only by motor boats |
 |
Most of the Islands cannot boast one
a deaf person who has benefited from post-primary education |
What is happening to Deaf People in the Pacific?
 |
Deaf children
still do not have access to education as basic fundamental human
rights. |
 |
Very few specialist teachers
who could communicate with the Deaf in their own language |
 |
Deaf people struggle to
gain access to education, health, recreation, decent housing
and employment |
 |
The absence
of these fundamental provisions affect their personal, community
and cultural development |
| |
 |
Misconceptions and superstitious
belief still permeate societal fabric |
Our areas of operations We intend to cover the whole of Pacific
Islands where sizeable community of the Deaf exist, and have as
priority the following Islands.
| 1. |
Fiji Islands (Suva & Lautoka |
| 2. |
Vanuatu |
| 3. |
Nauru |
| 4. |
Western Samoa |
| 5. |
Papua New Guinea |
|