Greece – June 2 2018

SOS Children’s Villages inaugurates new Village

The country’s financial crisis prompts the expansion of care for children on Crete

SOS Children’s Villages Greece has formally inaugurated a new Village on Crete to address the growing needs for care on the island.

The opening of the Village near Heraklion comes six years after SOS Children’s Villages Greece began work to strengthen families affected by the country’s economic crisis. It is the fourth Village in Greece and one of more than 570 SOS Children’s Villages worldwide to provide support for children who have lost parental care or are at risk of losing it.

“Before the economic crisis hit Greece, Crete was a very wealthy, very touristic island,” said George Protopapas, National Director of SOS Children’s Villages Greece. “In a very general way, problems seemed to be under control in Crete so there wasn’t any reason to start a project. But after the crisis, things started getting worse and we began creating a family strengthening network across Greece, including Heraklion. We saw a lot of broken families, neglected children and abuse. That is why we began to think about starting a Village.”

SOS Children’s Villages Greece initially used rental homes in Heraklion to offer family care. Through the initiative of several major supporters, the organisation decided to build a new Village to meet the growing needs of children who have lost parental care due in part to economic hardships. Construction began in late 2015 with the help of private donations, including land for the Village.

The Heraklion Village, which includes three houses, a recreational area and an office, has a capacity for 30 children.

Growing demand for care

SOS Children’s Villages Greece first began working on Crete in 2012 by strengthening vulnerable families in Heraklion, a commercial city hard hit by the economic crisis that began two years earlier. It will continue to provide short-term care for children at a rental home in Heraklion.

“This is the first time that we have been able to respond both to the long-term and the temporary needs of children, and in the future we are planning to use at least one of the houses as a youth house,” Mr Protopapas said.

He admits there are challenges ahead. Finding qualified mothers at the Heraklion Village is one. “We had 250 candidates from all over Greece and four from Crete,” he said. SOS Children’s Villages Greece is also being encouraged to expand its care for children and support for families in other parts of the country. In 2017, the organisation opened a home for babies in Athens to address a rise in neglect and abandonment cases.

SOS Children’s Villages has been working in Greece since 1975 and in addition to Crete, has Villages in Alexandroupolis, Thessaloniki and Vari, as well as family strengthening and other programmes across the country. Its emergency programme cares for unaccompanied boys and girls in Athens and operates a Child Friendly Space at the Kara Tepe refugee centre on the island of Lesvos.

Greece's President Prokopis Pavlopoulos receives a gift during the formal celebration of the new SOS Children's Village Heraklion on the island of Crete. Photo by Nikos Kikakis.

 

Learn more about our work in Greece.