Changing Lives

Sarah Vermont

A fortnightly audio plunge into the everyday lives of extraordinary people.

  1. The Secret Gardeners of Southend-on-Sea

    22/06/2021

    The Secret Gardeners of Southend-on-Sea

    Google Maps, for some unknown reason,  doesn't show the lovely oasis of the Cluny Gardens Allotments in Southend-on-Sea as green.  Don't they realise that the Benedictine monks of Prittlewell Priory gardened there for 400 years until Henry VIII scattered them to the four winds?  The current King of the Cluny Gardens is Tony Wagstaff who is a Reparation and Community Practitioner with Southend's  ISSP (Intensive Supervision and Surveillance Programme)...and, in ordinary language, a thoroughly nice bloke.  Since 2011 Tony has designed a garden at the Hampton Court Flower Show and won ten medals and awards.  Each year he takes a group of young people from the Early Help Family Support and Youth Offending Service and they create a memorable garden, some of which then go on to have a future life brightening up different parts of Southend.  In this podcast we hear from Tony and three of his volunteers, Rob, Curtis and Jake and from case worker, Ricardo, and social worker, Jane. You can catch up with them at the Hampton Court Flower Show this year which runs from 5-11 July.  They are creating one of the big show gardens, The Ability Garden.  https://www.rhs.org.uk/shows-events/rhs-hampton-court-palace-garden-festival/gardens/2021/the-ability-garden You can see The Therapeutic Garden talked about by Tony and Rob in the podcast here: https://www.southend.gov.uk/community-1/hampton-court-flower-show https://www.shootgardening.co.uk/article/southend-young-offenders-a-place-to-think-garden The music is The Parisian played by Kevin Macleod (with thanks for making this available under Creative Commons license).

    23 min
  2. Future Hope: The Early Years

    11/05/2021

    Future Hope: The Early Years

    There are 100,000 street children in Kolkata.  At the railway stations children on their own take refuge on lit platforms at night, hoping to protect themselves from abuse. During the day they make a few rupees by rag picking, working as coolies or in roadside food stalls. Many are ill and malnourished and often they become addicted to glue, which helps them forget the trauma of their life.  Over the past three decades the lives of 3,000 of these children have been transformed by a an extraordinary couple, Tim and Erica Grandage, and their team at Future Hope.  I am telling this story in three parts, the first is The Early Years and in the next we'll hear from the children and the amazing things they have achieved with their lives and in the last we'll look at how everyone at Future Hope, teachers, students and alumnae have all reached out into the local community and much further afield to help during the Covid crisis and the devastation of the cyclone that ravaged the Sunderbans last summer.  Have your handkerchiefs ready and prepare to feel very humble. You can catch up on Future Hope's news here:  https://www.futurehope.net The music is a very old well-known folk song called 'Thakur Jamai' sung by Swapna Chakraborty.  The lyrics are about a woman telling her sister-in-law to put some extra rice in the cooking pan, dress up in a beautiful yellow sari because her husband (her sister-in-law’s husband or Jamai) is coming home, he’s on the way from the railway station, all dressed up like a dandy, chewing paan to make his lips red...'Get fish from the fisherman, get vegetables, get all ready to welcome him'.   It’s happy, celebratory song.  With thanks to the Bengal Foundation.

    32 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.9
out of 5
10 Ratings

About

A fortnightly audio plunge into the everyday lives of extraordinary people.