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Iran's 'walls of kindness' offer help to the homeless | Iran's 'walls of kindness' offer help to the homeless |
(35 minutes later) | |
With the addition of a few hooks and a splash of paint, walls across Iran are being reinvented as part of an outdoor charity initiative in which strangers leave goods they no longer want for those who need them. | |
The message above a row of hooks reads “Wall of Kindness”. It is a place where passersby are invited to “leave what you do not need” or “take it if you need”. Similar messages have turned up throughout the country as Iranians take matters into their own hands to help homeless people. | |
In the southern city of Shiraz’s Ghadamgah street, a few coats, jackets and a pair of jeans are hung on the hooks of a wall of kindness painted blue. In Kermanshah, in the west of the country, a wall full of women’s clothes has been covered with plastic to protect them from rain, and beneath the clothes is a shelf of shoes. In the eastern town of Birjand, a young girl wearing worn-out shoes returns smiling with a new pair, albeit second-hand. | |
دیوار مهربانی در خیابان قدمگاه شیراز نیاز نداری بذار، نیاز داری بردار pic.twitter.com/Tw14SM2XDn | دیوار مهربانی در خیابان قدمگاه شیراز نیاز نداری بذار، نیاز داری بردار pic.twitter.com/Tw14SM2XDn |
It is not clear who started the trend, but in a country where use of social media networks is widespread, it has swiftly caught on. In the capital, Tehran, local municipalities have welcomed the move, promising to set up more kindness walls. | |
Iranian media have published pictures of walls in various provinces. “The old tales of kindness about people of old cities have come to reality today in a century struck by brutality and indifference,” said the reformist Shargh daily. | |
In Tehran alone more than 15,000 people are homeless, often referred to as kartonkhab – those who sleep in cardboard boxes. According to Reza Jahangiri, a Tehran municipality official, 80% of them are drug addicts and at least 15% are women. Iran neighbours Afghanistan, a leading producer and supplier of drugs, and its young population, hit hard by unemployment and inflation, has easy access to a wide variety of illicit substances. | |
In Tehran, some shops have reportedly put out refrigerators and invited people to leave food they do not want for homeless people to take. At least one bakery has put out a box of bread for those who cannot afford it. “Bread is free for those who can’t pay,” reads a sign on the box. | |
دیوار مهربانی به نانوایی مهربانیم رسید.... pic.twitter.com/WEvHOQqeEv | دیوار مهربانی به نانوایی مهربانیم رسید.... pic.twitter.com/WEvHOQqeEv |
Civil society in Iran is strong, and a number of non-governmental charities have had a significant impact recently, including the Mahak society, a Tehran-based organisation founded by the philanthropist Saeedeh Ghods that supports children with cancer. | |
Some charitable organisations have been hampered by sanctions imposed by the west on Iran. One unintended consequence was that imports of life-saving medicine were made difficult as international banks refused to handle any money associated with the country. | Some charitable organisations have been hampered by sanctions imposed by the west on Iran. One unintended consequence was that imports of life-saving medicine were made difficult as international banks refused to handle any money associated with the country. |
With sanctions expected to be lifted this weekend, there are rising hopes that such charities will once again be able to work as normal. |
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