WCPRC - Barnens Värld, Childrens World - EN
WCPRC
The World's Children's Prize for the Rights of the Child 2008:
Josefina Condori
Josefina infront of the dessert.
Dionisia was ten years old, tired and alone in the dark when Josefina Condori met her for the first time outside one of the evening schools in the city of Cusco. The family whose house Dionisia had worked in had thrown her out. She had nowhere to go.

Josefina made a snap decision. She would give girls like Dionisia a home, love and the knowledge to be able to fight for their rights.

> Meet Josefina Condori

Test your knowledge of the prize candidates 2008
Read the texts about the laureates 2008 and the children they help. Then try the quiz to see what you have learnt.
> Start the quiz

Why has Josefina been nominated?

Josefina Condori has been nominated for the 2008 WCPRC for her long struggle for girls who work as maids in Peru, often in slave-like conditions. Many of the hundreds of thousands of domestic workers face abuse in the homes in which they work. Josefina, who has been a maid herself, has been fighting for the rights of domestic workers since she was a teenager. In 1994 she founded Yanapanakusun, an organisation that runs a home for vulnerable girls and a centre for domestic workers. Josefina and Yanapanakusun run courses and do preventive work in 30 villages in the Andes mountain range around Cusco. They also broadcast five radio shows and run a hotel, a farm and a school for girls and boys who work. 500 girls have lived in the home. Tens of thousands have received support and help from the drop-in centre. Josefina gives the girls food, clothes, shoes, healthcare, a home, the chance to go to school, security and love. More than anything else, however, she works to ensure that child workers know their rights and are able to demand respect for those rights.
Girls in clothes from the Tinta area.
The children in the Cusco area love to dance and sing. There are lots of beautiful clothes to wear and dances to learn. Some originate from the Inca period and others have their roots in Spain.
> Cusco's wardrobe
Girl in bed
7.15 am
Time to wake up
During the winter months, Josefina wakes the girls at quarter past seven.
> A day at Yanapanakusun
Portait Rosia
High up on the mountain, Rosia feels free. She runs around with the sheep and plays with her brother and sister. Today she’s imagining that she works in the city of Cusco and has lovely new clothes.
> Meet Rosia
Portait Luz Garda
Luz Garda is 11 and is sitting on a bus, on the way to a city whose name she doesn’t know. She has run away.
> Meet Luz Garda
Girls in the Inca city
“Wow!' says Luz Garda and stretches her arms out like a condor, the sacred bird of the Inca people.
> Princesses visit the sacred valley
Portait Rebeca
¡Feliz cumpleaños!
Congratulations! Today is a very special day in Yanapanakusun. Today we celebrate everyone’s birthdays!
> Meet Rebeca
Portait Jani Maribel
Jeni Maribel loves going to school and loves doing sums. But today is Monday and the class is not going to learn anything new.
> Meet Jeni Maribel
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