Don Bosco Side Event at the 57th Session of the Commission for Social Development 2019
Don Bosco Side Event at the 57th Session of the Commission for Social Development 2019
DATE: February 21, 2019
CATEGORY: Advocacy, News

 TVET Initiative and Circular Migration – A Critical Intervention for Empowering Young Migrants.

Mr. Agostino Sella, Director, Associazione Don Bosco 2000 – TVET/CNOS speaking at the Youth led side event during the 57th Session of the Commission for Social Development 2019 at the United Nations Headquarters in New York highlighted the critical and important role the Salesians of Don Bosco was playing to empower young migrants by providing them employment oriented vocational training. This process he said enabled young migrants to acquire skills that they could then use to empower their communities in their countries of origin. Calling this process “Circular Migration” he said that such an intervention is important in addressing the global challenge of migration. Agostino was one of the panelists at the side event: Youth Empowered! Enabling Youth Through Social Protection: Education, Employment, Environment. He had to step in for Diallo FOUSSEYNOU, a young Senegalese migrant. Diallo could not be present as he was denied visa to come for the event.  Moderated by Interns at the United Nations Genevieve Pinnington & Greta Hunt, young panelists  Morgan Thobe, Youth Engagement Fellow, UNICEF- USA, Apefa Adjivon, Founder & Executive Director, The Pearl Project, Agostino Sella, President & Founder, Associazione Don Bosco, TVET/CNOS,  Saphira Rameshfar, Representative to the United Nations, Baha’i International,  Devopriya Dutta, Coordinator, Tarumitra highlighted the initiatives each of them had undertaken to empower young people through education, employment and  environmental action. They underlined the fact that these are important elements of social protection. Questions from the participants to Agostino helped to highlight the charism of Don Bosco which invests in the young, especially those from marginalized communities so that they emerge empowered as leaders of their people to secure a future for themselves and their communities.

The presence of a large contingent of Salesians; Bishop Miguel Angel Olaverri Arroniz from Congo, Fr. Alphonse Owoudou, Provincial of ATE (Congo), Fr. Mark Hyde, Executive Director and Fr. Piotr Gozdalski from Salesian Missions, Fr. Sebastian Chirayath from Kenya, Fr. Joseph Amal from Australia, Fr. Thomas Pallithanam the Salesian UN representative, Ms. Maggie and Mr. Greg from the Salesian Missions –  underlining the global presence of the Salesians –  added a special “gravitas” and a Salesian flavor to the event.

Of the many important take-aways one was the call by Saphira Rameshfar – Representative to the UN for Bahai International, an Australian citizen for a New Societal Order. When called on to elaborate, admitting that it was difficult to define  she said “a just world could not emerge from going about it in unjust ways”. She added that it would call for more trust in the young people, for greater inclusiveness and generosity from them and from everyone else. The panelists also called for creating more space for young people to participate in decision making.

The side event was planned as a curtain raiser for the upcoming July High Level Political Forum that will be reviewing the same themes of Education (SDG 4) Employment (SDG 8) Environment (SDG 13) besides Inequality (SDG 10) Peace and Justice (SDG 16) and International Cooperation (SDG 17) along with the over-arching theme of Empowerment, Inclusion and Leaving No One Behind.

The panelists, responding to a final question from Thomas Pallithanam, the Salesian UN Representative as to what would be their specific policy asks from global governance to address gaps the issue of education, employment and environmental action they reiterated that besides better implementation of existing policies the need to involve young people in policy making. They thus gave a clarion call for greater youth participation in taking forward Agenda 2030, the Sustainable Development Goals.

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