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Nairobi Slum Kids Rap About Recycling, 'Trash is Cash' (VIDEO)

Posted: 01/05/11 12:33 PM ET

Link TV, one of the nation's largest independent television broadcasters devoted to providing diverse global perspectives on news, current events, and world culture, recently launched ViewChange.org, a new multimedia website to spark progress in improving the lives of people in developing countries.

As part of the launch, ViewChange held an online, short film contest focused on stories showing progress in global development. In all, Link TV named six winners out of 136 entries, representing each of the film contest's six categories. Each winner received a category prize of $5,000 and the Grand Prize winner received an additional $25,000. All the winning filmmakers featured here discuss what compelled them to make their films. All the ViewChange films can be viewed here.

Film: Trash Is Cash
Category: Sustainability

Even in the slums there are small, very small heroes that have been able to find an alternative way of coming out of poverty at the incredible age of 10 or maybe 13 years old.

Wafalme (the Kings) live in Nairobi (Kenya) in the slum area of Mathare Valley and they represent a rare example of motivated youth. They are already hip-hop stars thanks to the positive message that reaches millions of youngsters in Kenya and now they want to speak to kids all over the world.

They communicate through music: the message in this way is very powerful because music has long been a favorite pastime of teens and has influenced the minds of youths all over the world, and they use their music to raise awareness, inspire action, and accelerate the worldwide movement to reduce extreme poverty. Music meets life, seeing beauty, giving hope and alternatives. All eight of them are living in an African slum. Living on less than one dollar a day. Not turning to a life of idleness, drug abuse and crime but acting positively and being a positive example for all the youths who live in poverty.

In Trash is Cash the Wafalme envision the recycling activities of the neighbourhood as an energetic and winning solution inside a reality where the total lack of basic social services seems to suggest a more easy resignation.

They live in shacks made by pieces of corrugated metal, without any hygienic services. They live in dusty roads full of potholes and mud puddles and crossed by a big number of bad smelling streams mixed with organic scraps and urine, where children play and meat and vegetables are sold.

The trash bins have not arrived in Mathare, Dandora and Korogocho. Only the youths have been able to organize themselves and to clean up the streets once a week: In this way they have created jobs and a way to keep the environment clean. With their activism the youth are progressive. They show us how recycling can be the best solution.

If the dump site were moved, a lot of local people would lose their livelihoods. To avoid using plastic is impossible by now -- as unrealistic as hoping that the City Council will take into consideration a municipal trash collection service for Dandora and Korogocho. These two slums are totally lacking trash collection, despite the fact that houses, shops and hotels from all of Nairobi dump roughly 1.5 tons of trash there every day.

Research by the UNEP shows that residents of Mathare, Dandora and Korogocho are dying because of this dump. A total of 328 children and adolescents living and schooling there were examined. Half of the children tested had concentrations of lead in their blood exceeding internationally accepted levels.

And here come the solutions.

The strongest suggestion is coming up from the youth of the slum: "trash is cash."

Plastic, iron, paper, glass, and organic waste (80 percent of the total trash) can be recycled and become a source of incoming for thousands of the inhabitants.

Some have invented work for themselves and are actually producing water-purification systems, compost, bio-fuel from coffee seeds and paperboard... all developed with self-constructed machines.

There is still very little information in Europe and the rest of the world about real, non-sensational, daily life of residents in developing countries in Sub-Saharan Africa.

The music video was written and developed by Wafalme in a partnership with Cultural Video Foundation and With the sponsorship of Slum Talent Trust.

The aim is to underline the force of initiative within all local youth groups.

In a digital age like the one we are living the information is the first merchandise, but also an instrument, when properly managed, which can positively transform the common mentality.

The innovative force connected with the use of the waste as a source of alternative energy will succeed. The positive results are that recycling creates a source of income for a big number of people in a slum where joblessness and surplus trash cause a major part of the problems.

From this slum comes a very interesting lesson in this age when pollution and the deforestation are destroying our planet.

It will be not only interesting, but mainly useful to show all the youth of the world how "trash is cash," and moreover how recycling can be practiced by everybody.



 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
qthedancer
05:39 AM on 01/06/2011
Damn! Those kids ROCK!!! Can't keep a strong spirit down!
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mslovey
I love hard...i just can't help it. #Obama2012
05:04 AM on 01/06/2011
Many European countries dispose their waste especially electronic into Africa. I have seen a documentary on BBC where a tracking device was planted into an unwanted Television set from a house hold In London and was sent off for safe disposal and 3 weeks later, it was tracked in a pile of electronic trash in Ghana. The documentary was very distressing and it prompted a probe into the matter. Africans use more raw and fresh stuff than canned or bottled yet they seem to have more pile of trash than else where. If their corrupt presidents do not get their act together and stop accepting trash for cash from the west, these kids will be singing 'Trash is death'.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
abuja19
01:25 AM on 01/06/2011
Those kids are amazing. How they can conjure up activities so positive even when they are surrounding by negativity and poverty speaks volumes about them. I hope and wish them the best!
12:03 AM on 01/06/2011
Love your song and message.

Be careful around the trash kids!

Someone needs to post some guidelines for handling this waste.
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lightist
light as a photon, heavy as tungsten.
11:49 PM on 01/05/2011
That is genius overall. Some of the voices are 'too processed' if they want to 'keep it real'. I hope they get that together and globalize it. It's all about:

"The Underdog" ... Chuck D

www.youtube.com/watch?v=e2x7jxckpHs
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11:41 PM on 01/05/2011
Trash may be cash to these kids now, but what good or value is that cash if they don't even make it to their 30th birthday because the very trash they make 'cash' from kills them with cancers or other illness from the toxic metals, polymers and other inherent hazards from sorting and processing the same without the needed saftey and exposure measures in properly recycling the same?
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11:09 PM on 01/05/2011
Well done. The children have beautiful voices and a great message.
10:38 PM on 01/05/2011
So great...they should dig a well...
10:37 PM on 01/05/2011
This video has moved me to tears just think people who r living without running water, electricity, adequate shelter are reinventing themselves using trash to uplift themseleves .Inventing machines out of trash to make their lives bettetr while we in so called first world nations continue to pollute the planet as of today I am recycling.The african genuis will arise again!!!!

www.stewartsynopsis.com
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02:32 AM on 01/06/2011
Why are they living in these conditions, it isnt the "first world nations" that caused this, it was Nairobians. Nairobi was a deserted wetland until the British empire built it into a beautiful country that grew and had nice buildings, once the British left around 1960s its been going downhill ever since. Wonder why?
09:35 PM on 01/05/2011
If the sight of that plastic pollution bothers you check out http://www.recycledplasticblockhouses.com

Ronald Omyonga is an architect in Nairobi. He challenged me to come up with something that could change lives in the slums of Nairobi.

I believe I have.

It's open source. That means the plans and concept is free for all to use. The only thing we ask is for anyone that improves upon it to share their knowledge with everyone else.
11:40 PM on 01/05/2011
Harvey, well done on your fantastic work! Hopefully more people will discover it and help share this brilliant idea. Do you mind if I just make one suggestion - your website I think would be a little more compelling with a clear statement of what you are doing and what the objective is on the front page - even a diagram or some visual representation to show what the end product may look like. Maybe also a timeline/summary of achievements to date. At the moment this feels like someone else's project half way through - difficult to catch up and get involved with if you don't know what's going on. Don't want to be critical, just know that chances of success are always amplified with effective communication. Good luck!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Angie Cordeiro
We do all things with Grace which empowers us.
06:42 AM on 01/06/2011
Fanned and Favorite!

Keep us posted and pls post often.
08:55 PM on 01/05/2011
I don't know if this should make me happy or sad.
08:50 PM on 01/05/2011
Considering that America produces like a third of the world's trash, the vast majority of which is not being recycled, 'trash is cash' will not be catching on any time soon stateside.
mgpayne
Trying to make sense of it all
09:03 PM on 01/05/2011
Not only is trash not being recycled but if you look at the streets an our neighborhoods. No one puts anything in the trash. Our towns and cities looks like a 3rd world country. Let's start teaching our children and people (who should know better) to pick up the trash.
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02:37 AM on 01/06/2011
We produce the most because we consume the most, we consume the most because we have the most disposable wealth and income, we have that because we still have the worlds largest economy, we have that because we are still surviving on the strong economic industrial base we once had, we had that because we had a bunch of hard working, honest, creative men and women who busted their asses to create and produce products and then trade with the world. Now we produce nothing but angst and apathy.
08:36 PM on 01/05/2011
Trash is Cash, that is awesome. Love to hear that the next generation is enthusiastically recycling. If the human race is not Earth conscious and we do not recycle, then we are planetary parasites. I boycott bottled water and take old containers and refill them with clean water from my machine. I store bulk quantities of the water. Have a wonderful winter and I llok forward to seeing you all at Earth day in the spring.

We Are All One,
Carlton Krumpfes
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SPQR1052
VET & GLBT - http://www.ryanvouchercare.com -
08:34 PM on 01/05/2011
Nairobi as in KENYA?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
phuqabolic
hakuna matata
08:54 PM on 01/05/2011
Nairobi is in kenya...if you didn't know now you know Ninja!
08:30 PM on 01/05/2011
I dont even know what to say. My thoughts range from "We're the cancer of the planet" to "Why havent we launched this stuff in space yet?"

Its just ridiculous how we have created so much waste. Its apart of life but... damn if this planet didnt seem nicer until we arrived.
09:39 PM on 01/05/2011
100 percent recycling of plastic trash without burning carbon fuels, no electricty, no diesel, no gasoline, and 100 percent plastic recycling. http://www.motherearthnews.com/hands-on-and-how-to/recycled-plastic-block-houses.aspx