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These days Taina is very close to his daughter, Margaret. But it has taken years of healing to recover from the violence he once inflicted on his family, which has clearly left physical and emotional scars.

Now a church elder and chairman of the council of chiefs of Pari Village, Taina admits he was a violent man in his younger days, drinking to excess and taking a hand to his children.

“I`ve been a reckless one before. I did not have any respect for anybody. This was my lifestyle €“ drinking made it worse,” he says.

“I did not inherit this sort of lifestyle from my parents. My parents were good people. It was in my young days when I got into peer group situations. I wanted to be a hero, you know? I was a leader and I thought a leader had to be an aggressive one. That made me turn into this violent type of person.”

Taina says the problem escalated over the years. His children were terrifed of him, his wife prayed for him. Eventually he ended up being taken to the police station €“ a moment that finally woke him up to the problem and started to shift his mindset.

“My change was slow, very slow,” says Taina. “As time went on, I came to realise that what I was doing was not the right thing to do €“ getting drunk, coming home and having my family waste their precious time with me while I`m sitting there drinking, doing nothing. It was not fair for them and I thought, I must stop.”

Taina was assisted by the church members in his community to turn his life around. “I sort of got my senses back. All those things that I was doing was wrong. So I went from wrong to right, bad to good.”

Now Taina says he worries about the future of his grandchildren, growing up in a country which has some of the highest rates of violence against women and children in the world.

“Papua New Guinea has a problem, a real problem,” says Taina. “We treat women as second rate. But today it`s not the case. It should be man and woman, side by side. The man does woman`s work, the woman also does man`s work.”

Taina recently spoke at the launch of PNG`s new family and sexual violence hotline, called the 1-TOK KAUNSELIN HELPIM LAIN, to share his message that women and men must walk alongside each other and learn to live together in peace. He thinks it is important that people on both sides of the relationship use the free counselling service to get the help they need to stop the violence in their home.

“Men have to be counselled in that area of holding their temper. We have to be very careful as men,” says Taina. “Even if the woman is provoking you, what the man has to do is leave the situation. Cool down and come back again. That`s what I do now. When things get heated up, I used to pull my fist. Now, no, I walk away. Calm myself down, come back. That`s what I want to tell the men: we don`t have to show that we are superior.”

Taina hopes that by sharing his story, others can use it as a learning experience. Most of all, he would like to see more men come to “the good side of life” and choose to be at peace with themselves and their families, just like he has done.

“The end goal is a good community,” he says. “Men, women and children living together in peace and harmony.”

715-08000 is the FREE number to call (within PNG only) to receive counselling and support for family and sexual violence issues. The 1-Tok Kaunselin Helpim Lain is a partnership between ChildFund Papua New Guinea, CIMC (FSVAC) and FHI 360, supported by the New Zealand Aid Programme, USAID, ChildFund New Zealand and ChildFund Australia. 

25 November is the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.

In India, an estimated 47 percent of girls are married before the age of 18; putting their physical, emotional and mental health at risk. Although it is illegal in India for girls under 18 and boys under 21 to marry, the tradition remains entrenched.

ChildFund India has been working with three partner organisations in the state of Madhya Pradesh, which has one of the highest rates of child marriage in India, to help children gain the confidence they need to stand against early marriage.

Village monitoring committees have been formed, made up of community elders and youth club members. These committees act as watchdogs in the community to prevent early marriages. Additionally, ChildFund India recently launched Anmol Jeevan, a 100 day awareness-raising campaign, that occurred across 75 villages.

At the inaugural event of the campaign, youth members who had been active in the fight against child marriage were recognised before local government officials and thousands of community members who were there to support the cause.

One of the youth members recognised at the event was 17-year-old Sonam, who received an award for actively addressing the issue of early marriage and for also standing up against her own marriage.

“ChildFund has changed my life €” it came in as a ray of hope and has given me the courage to dream about my future,” she said while accepting the award.

When her parents decided that she was ready to be married, Sonam and her youth club came together to speak to her parents. Sonam shared that she did not want to get married before reaching the legal age of marriage and also wanted to study longer to achieve her dreams. After a lot of persuasion, they were able to convince Sonam`s parents. Now, with their support, she is preparing for her exams, with plans to become an engineer and help her village.

Sonam has been involved with ChildFund India since day one of the project. She has actively participated in several of ChildFund`s programs, including awareness camps and meetings on early marriage. She also encourages mothers to get their children immunized and provide nutritious food. She has also been actively promoting literacy in her village by doing door-to-door counselling, visiting schools and getting children of her village enrolled in local schools.

“If convinced properly, parents will support their daughters` wishes to study instead of getting them married at an early age,” says Sonam.

And when they do, these girls will be able to make enormous contributions within their own communities, just as Sonam has.