Boy goes barefoot for the world
Ajit Jain in Toronto
May 04, 2009
Bilaal Rajan - Walk without your shoes for a week and feel how the world's less fortunate children live. That is the appeal UNICEF Ambassador [Images] Bilaal Rajan, 12, issued.
To celebrate National Volunteer Week (April 19 to 25), Bilaal spearheaded an initiative in Toronto where he lived' life without shoes for the entire week' to empathise with children in poorer countries who can't afford footwear.
"You never really know someone until you walk a mile in their shoes," he says.
He points out children in poorer countries walk miles barefoot every day. His appeal was circulated widely among students, teachers and the public.
"The response was amazing," Bilaal addds. "People signed up on Facebook and e-mailed from different parts of the world."
He has firsthand seen the plight of thousands and thousands of not so privileged children. He has visited countries in Africa, Latin America and also been to Myanmar as UNICEF's child ambassador.
"When people asked me why I don't have shoes, I told them because too many children throughout the world don't, either," Bilaal says. "My goal is to inspire children to find their passion, take action and create a more caring world."
His publicists say Bilaal Rajan has raised over $5 million for causes in the last eight years. Four years ago, he was named child ambassador for UNICEF Canada [Images].
He recently published a book, Making Change: Tips from an Underage Overachiever.
"I just started dictating my thoughts on the voice recorder," he says, "and it went on and on and finally it was transcribed and edited for publication."
Text: Ajit Jain in Toronto
Bilaal Rajan, 12 - UNICEF's child ambassador
The Province Honours Community Leaders
A 13-year-old is among 11 outstanding Ontarians to receive the province's Medal for Good Citizenship for their commitment to the betterment of their communities.
Bilaal Rajan, the youngest ever recipient of the Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship will be recognized for his work to help disadvantaged children around the world. Others to be honoured come from areas as diverse as education, health, environment, engineering and social innovation.
This year's recipients will be honoured at a ceremony to be held today at Queen's Park by The Honourable David C. Onley, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario.
Created in 1973, the Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship recognizes people who have made exceptional long-term contributions to their communities.
http://news.ontario.ca/mci/en/2009/11/y ... izens.html
A 13-year-old is among 11 outstanding Ontarians to receive the province's Medal for Good Citizenship for their commitment to the betterment of their communities.
Bilaal Rajan, the youngest ever recipient of the Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship will be recognized for his work to help disadvantaged children around the world. Others to be honoured come from areas as diverse as education, health, environment, engineering and social innovation.
This year's recipients will be honoured at a ceremony to be held today at Queen's Park by The Honourable David C. Onley, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario.
Created in 1973, the Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship recognizes people who have made exceptional long-term contributions to their communities.
http://news.ontario.ca/mci/en/2009/11/y ... izens.html
Humanitaritween Bilaal Rajan
January 29, 2010 by Simona Panetta
Filed under Featured, Success Story
http://www.citylifemagazine.ca/success_ ... rajan/4325
“I don’t know if I consider myself mature for my age but I definitely consider myself an average 13-year-old.” For someone who has shot the breeze with the likes of Nelson Mandela, Roméo Dallaire and Desmond Tutu, Bilaal Rajan is not your typical teenybopper; he’s not even your run-of-the-mill human being. He was just four years old when tackling global poverty became his playground. When I was that age, the idea of selling Clementine oranges door-to-door to raise money for earthquake victims in Gujarat, India, would never have crossed my mind as I pushed Barbie and Ken in a luxurious convertible Corvette across a laminate floor. Your childhood mentality was probably the same.
Let’s be completely honest with each other: making a difference in the world is as far from many of our Western minds as a remote ocean island on the most extreme point of the Earth. It’s not that we’re oblivious to other people’s needs, it’s that we participate in the social phenomenon that is diffusion of responsibility, where we socially loaf around thinking that someone else is taking action. We are floaters. And it’s a long way down until our toes touch the ground. But we always have a choice, said Jean-Paul Sartre; and “I guess in my life I chose to do this,” says Bilaal Rajan, who recently carried the Olympic torch through the streets of Toronto. Sometimes we select to superficially put complaints of a bad haircut or breakup on the top of our lists. This, while some of the world’s inhabitants experience dark valleys of pain and devastation and a cup of dirt-stained water is more miracle than malady.
[View with PicLens]
Richmond Hill, Ont.,s Rajan knows all about this, and at such a young age, he has already proved that age really is just a number. “So many people around the world don’t exactly have what we have here. I visit so many countries – 25 to date – and being able to see how other children suffer and seeing the different lifestyles between what we have here and how they live there is astounding. I’ve always wanted to help ever since I’ve been able to realize the difference it can make in people’s lives,” says Rajan, an only child whose relief efforts, fundraising feats and speaking events have propelled him to superhero status. As a children’s rights activist visibly concerned with the plight of Haitian children, the HIV/AIDS pandemic and climate change, he has raised thousands of dollars for The World Partnership Walk and millions as the official child spokesperson for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), an organization that procures continuing humanitarian and developmental aid for children and mothers in developing countries. In 2004, he developed the UNICEF Canada Kids Earthquake Challenge, inspiring Canada’s youth to participate. “Children are the future of the globe today. In the next 50 years, someone who will be the next president or prime minister or any other political leader is someone who is a child today,” says Rajan, a mover-and-shaker who summers in the Maldives and Tanzania – where in 2006 life expectancy at birth was 50 years – to educate people about HIV/AIDS.
“Be the change you want to see in the world,” reflects Rajan on his favourite Mahatma Gandhi quote. Those words inspired him to pen his self-created destiny with Making Change: Tips From an Underage Overachiever (Orca Book Publishers, 2008). “The book reveals all the actions I take each and every day of my life.” When he’s not saving the world, Rajan finds time to spend with family and playing with schoolmates. After all, he is just your average 13-year-old.
www.bilaalrajan.com
www.makingchangenow.com
www.unicef.org
January 29, 2010 by Simona Panetta
Filed under Featured, Success Story
http://www.citylifemagazine.ca/success_ ... rajan/4325
“I don’t know if I consider myself mature for my age but I definitely consider myself an average 13-year-old.” For someone who has shot the breeze with the likes of Nelson Mandela, Roméo Dallaire and Desmond Tutu, Bilaal Rajan is not your typical teenybopper; he’s not even your run-of-the-mill human being. He was just four years old when tackling global poverty became his playground. When I was that age, the idea of selling Clementine oranges door-to-door to raise money for earthquake victims in Gujarat, India, would never have crossed my mind as I pushed Barbie and Ken in a luxurious convertible Corvette across a laminate floor. Your childhood mentality was probably the same.
Let’s be completely honest with each other: making a difference in the world is as far from many of our Western minds as a remote ocean island on the most extreme point of the Earth. It’s not that we’re oblivious to other people’s needs, it’s that we participate in the social phenomenon that is diffusion of responsibility, where we socially loaf around thinking that someone else is taking action. We are floaters. And it’s a long way down until our toes touch the ground. But we always have a choice, said Jean-Paul Sartre; and “I guess in my life I chose to do this,” says Bilaal Rajan, who recently carried the Olympic torch through the streets of Toronto. Sometimes we select to superficially put complaints of a bad haircut or breakup on the top of our lists. This, while some of the world’s inhabitants experience dark valleys of pain and devastation and a cup of dirt-stained water is more miracle than malady.
[View with PicLens]
Richmond Hill, Ont.,s Rajan knows all about this, and at such a young age, he has already proved that age really is just a number. “So many people around the world don’t exactly have what we have here. I visit so many countries – 25 to date – and being able to see how other children suffer and seeing the different lifestyles between what we have here and how they live there is astounding. I’ve always wanted to help ever since I’ve been able to realize the difference it can make in people’s lives,” says Rajan, an only child whose relief efforts, fundraising feats and speaking events have propelled him to superhero status. As a children’s rights activist visibly concerned with the plight of Haitian children, the HIV/AIDS pandemic and climate change, he has raised thousands of dollars for The World Partnership Walk and millions as the official child spokesperson for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), an organization that procures continuing humanitarian and developmental aid for children and mothers in developing countries. In 2004, he developed the UNICEF Canada Kids Earthquake Challenge, inspiring Canada’s youth to participate. “Children are the future of the globe today. In the next 50 years, someone who will be the next president or prime minister or any other political leader is someone who is a child today,” says Rajan, a mover-and-shaker who summers in the Maldives and Tanzania – where in 2006 life expectancy at birth was 50 years – to educate people about HIV/AIDS.
“Be the change you want to see in the world,” reflects Rajan on his favourite Mahatma Gandhi quote. Those words inspired him to pen his self-created destiny with Making Change: Tips From an Underage Overachiever (Orca Book Publishers, 2008). “The book reveals all the actions I take each and every day of my life.” When he’s not saving the world, Rajan finds time to spend with family and playing with schoolmates. After all, he is just your average 13-year-old.
www.bilaalrajan.com
www.makingchangenow.com
www.unicef.org
Governor General of Canada awards Bilaal Rajan with Meritorious Service Medal
http://www.gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/2017/ ... rg-eng.php
Bilaal Rajan, M.S.M.
http://www.gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/2017/ ... rg-eng.php
Bilaal Rajan, M.S.M.