Lahore (AsiaNews)
- "I lost my mother when I was three. A year after my father abandoned me
and left me alone"; this is the moving story of Shama, a Christian girl of 22,
saved by the work of Chanan Development Association (CDA), an association
founded in 2004 by collaboration between Muslims and Christians to help dozens
of orphans to restore meaning to their lives through theater ,
but mainly through the sharing of life experiences. After
the tragic loss of her parents, Shama was raised by her older brothers and
sisters. Her
life changed several years ago when she met with CDA operators who invited her
to play with other young people in the company. The
girl had been forced to interrupt her studies because of the economic circumstances
of her family. However, she is
optimistic. "Now
I am an actress and this helps me - she says - but in future I would like to
become a professional beautician."
The
Chanan Development Association is a 'secular non-profit association founded in
2004 by Muhammad Shahzad, a young Muslim who chose to dedicate his life to more
underprivileged children. Like many millions of young Pakistanis Muhammad clashed
head on at just 12 years of age with the harsh reality of Pakistan's Islamic
traditions. In
his early teens he held a hunger strike against the forced marriage of the
sister of 15 years with a man of 50. That
gesture struck his family and later the whole community of his village,
including the absurdity of the gesture, pushing his father to renounce marriage
losing, for the sake of his children, even the potential economic gains. After
this experience, at the age of 20, Muhammad decided to create an association
able to tell through eyewitness accounts the harsh reality of many families and
young Pakistanis.
Together
with some friends founded the Board of Directors, helping thousands of orphans
through theater and young people in difficulty, giving them the opportunity to
tell their own story, but also to exploit and utilize their knowledge, skills
and expertise to improve their status in society. To
achieve its objectives CDA has initiated four programs named "Happy",
a program for active youth participation in socially disadvantaged contexts,
"Welcome", which aims to empower young women by giving them education
and instruction; "Help" an initiative to offer support to single
mothers and street children.