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‘Everyone is crying here’: Mother hit by soaring bills given ‘home from home’ by Parent Club

Kitchen Club is an opportunity for local families to cook, eat, play and learn together over a healthy lunch with low cost ingredients (Jordan Mansfield/Comic Relief)
Kitchen Club is an opportunity for local families to cook, eat, play and learn together over a healthy lunch with low cost ingredients (Jordan Mansfield/Comic Relief)

When you’re getting dressed up for party season, spare a thought for Hawa. The closest she gets to dressing up is piling on layers of clothes to keep herself warm in order to save heating for when her two young children get home.

The 33-year-old mother of two is a regular at Parent Club in Clapton, east London, one of the organisations The Independent is looking to fund in our Christmas Appeal in partnership with Comic Relief.

They work with local families, most of whom live in temporary accommodation in two nearby hostels, putting on play sessions for children, making healthy meals and passing on information about nutrition to parents.

Hawa, who fled her native Guinea as a teenager to escape female circumcision, has been coming to the group since her six-year-old daughter was a baby. She is now a fixture around the place, helping new parents settle in, sharing advice and translating for some of them.

She lives in a one-bedroom flat and says many women who attend have been in tears over money worries and bills.

She said: “The electricity and gas has become so expensive. Things that used to be one pound cost two so I try to minimise heating.”

Some weeks she visits the group several times but says the conversation is often the same, adding: “Everyone is crying here, really crying – either the price of electricity or they don’t have money”.

The Independent’s Christmas campaign to tackle the cost of living crisis (Independent)
The Independent’s Christmas campaign to tackle the cost of living crisis (Independent)

She is permanently in debt to the electric company and has noticed how the credit on her pre-paid meter depletes faster than ever.

“Three days ago, I put in £10 and today it there was just £4 left and I’m in disbelief at how quickly the money is eaten up,” she said.

Parent Club also helps mothers such as Hawa feel a sense of community, particularly as the hostel rules do not allow visitors.

The project was set up by Chris Brown, a teacher turned charity worker, who said the key to their success was their “informal” approach to people who might be scared of officialdom.

“We’re not really trying to do an intervention,” he said. “Our priority is engaging hard-to-reach families who might feel a little uncomfortable in a more formal setting but, in addition to a healthy, hearty meal once a week, we’re also hoping to act as a bridge to other outlets that might be useful to them.”

Up to two dozen adults with children attend their sessions and project volunteers often go door to door at hostels to tell new arrivals how Parent Club can help.

Chris added: “A lot of our families are new to the country and some have got long-standing mental health issues. It can be difficult to navigate a new community.

“If you’re in temporary accommodation, you’ve got a lot going on, and if you’re a single mum with two kids, it can be quite hard to even get organised to leave the house. Everything is optional. If people want to sit and have a cup of tea, that’s fine.”

But costs for the centre that hosts Parent Club are going up, too, with energy bills due to rise steeply from £2,500 last year to £12,000. So additional funding will be needed just to keep the lights on.

Kitchen Club supports parents at risk of homelessness or who have previously been homeless (Jordan Mansfield/Comic Relief)
Kitchen Club supports parents at risk of homelessness or who have previously been homeless (Jordan Mansfield/Comic Relief)

For Hawa, the place is a reminder of happy times in her early childhood. “I grew up in a big family where we all sat down to eat and talk together and this place offers that. I come here and I know lunch is sorted and I meet and talk to other people and sometimes there is even some extra food I can take home. It’s both my back-up plan and a home-from-home.”

She also takes solace from the other women, saying: “It gives me confidence to know I’m not alone. Most of the women here have gone through similar situations to me and come through. They have survived the storm and are strong women.”

Christmas appeal in a nutshell

What is happening?

We have partnered with Comic Relief to launch On the Breadline, our cost of living Christmas Appeal, and Comic Relief has pledged £1m to kick off our fund.

Where will the money go?

To organisations in London and across the UK that are working to help people on the breadline cope with the cost of living crisis.

How you can help?

To help children and communities most impacted by the cost of living crisis, donate here.

What would your money buy?

  • £10 could help feed a family of three for a week

  • £20 could buy a winter kit containing a blanket, hat, scarf and gloves

  • £50 could buy a utility top up voucher for a vulnerable family

  • £75 could help provide a slow cooker, recipes and cooking sessions for a family

  • £100 could provide an emergency shopping voucher for a family struggling with cost of living rises