Street Kid: One Childs Desperate Fight for Survival
By (Author) Judy Westwater
With Wanda Carter
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
1st May 2007
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: philosophy and social sciences
True stories of survival of abuse and injustice
362.76092
Paperback
320
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
220g
John Peel first brought Judy's moving childhood story to light on Home Truths. Abducted by her psychotic spiritualist father and kept like a dog in the backyard, she went on to suffer at the brutal hands of nuns in a Manchester orphanage, before living wild on the streets. An incredible, heart-wrenching story of a child who refused to give up.
After a childhood lived in terror, in 1994 Judy was presented with an Unsung Heroes Award for her charity work with street children in South Africa. Her moving story came to light after Judy was interviewed by John Peel on BBCs Home Truths. Street Kid is the inspirational and heartwrenching story of her early years.
At age two, in postwar Manchester, Judy was snatched from her mother and sisters by her psychotic father a spiritualist preacher. He kept her in his backyard, leaving her to scavenge from bins to beat off starvation. At four, she was sent to an inhumanely strict catholic orphanage, before being put back in her fathers cruel care. For the next three years she was treated as a virtual slave.
After being taken by her father to South Africa, Judy ran away to join the circus where she found her first taste of freedom and friendship before her father tracked her down. Weeks later Judy was alone again and living on the streets, too terrified to turn to her circus friends. For 9 months 12-year-old Judy made her home in a shed behind a bottle store before collapsing in a shop doorway from near-starvation.
Finally, aged 17, Judy managed to pay her way back to England to find her mother and sisters. But her return to Manchester cruelly shattered any dreams of a happy reunion.
Determined that her childhood experiences should in some way give meaning to her life, Judy has worked tirelessly to help children in need back in South Africa in the very place she had been treated to such abuse herself. She has opened 7 centres to date.
If Judys story doesnt become a book, DVD, video Ill be amazed. John Peel
After a tormented childhood, much of which she lived as a feral child, Judy Westwater was determined to make her life meaningful. After setting up two drama schools in Surrey and later in Inverness, she went on to work with street kids for seven years in Mexico. Over the past ten years, Judy has set up seven day centres for children in the violent townships of South Africa and lectured to many thousands across the UK to raise funds for her work, earning an Unsung Heroes Award in 2004. Her childhood story, was the subject of one of John Peels most moving interviews on BBC Radio 4s Home Truths. ITVs This Morning followed Judy out to South Africa in 2008 to witness firsthand the incredible work she is doing out there, recording an extremely moving mini documentary on her that also features where she was homeless as a child. See http://www.youtube.com/watchv=9Tgh2SG4o_8.