Debt Talk: Healing the Trauma of Poverty

The trauma of poverty is the lasting emotional, psychological, and social impact of living with ongoing financial hardship. For many Bangladeshi and other racially minoritised communities, poverty is experienced as constant stress, uncertainty, stigma, and exclusion. These experiences are often compounded by economic inequalities, low pay, insecure employment, rising living costs, debt, housing insecurity, migration, language barriers, racism, discrimination, and cultural expectations around family responsibility and maintaining dignity.
A culturally sensitive approach recognises that experiences of poverty are shaped by economic circumstances, culture, faith, migration history, and community context. It acknowledges that people may experience shame differently, seek support through family or community networks, or face barriers to accessing mainstream services because of language, trust, financial exclusion, or fear of stigma. Effective support therefore requires services that are culturally responsive, economically and trauma-informed, and co-produced with the communities we serve.
A grassroots perspective recognises that poverty is not a personal failure but the result of structural economic and social inequalities. Addressing the trauma of poverty requires both practical support—such as access to debt advice, financial inclusion, secure employment, affordable housing, welfare support, and mental health services—and sustained action to tackle the systemic inequalities that create and perpetuate poverty.
— Ripon Ray, Founder of Debt Talk; author of Covid Crisis: Brit-Bangla Response
Debt Talk CIC was founded in response to the profound trauma experienced by Bangladeshi communities in London during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The crisis not only exposed long-standing inequalities, but it also deepened financial hardship, emotional distress, and generational wounds caused by poverty. In the face of this adversity, the strength of the Bangladeshi community shone through acts of solidarity, storytelling, mutual care, and collective problem-solving. These experiences were documented in the publication Covid Crisis: The Brit-Bangla Response, which laid the groundwork for a trauma-informed approach to addressing poverty trauma support.
Debt Talk CIC exists to centre healing, dignity, and empowerment by:
Creating trauma-aware anti-poverty forums where Bangladeshi communities can safely explore the root causes of poverty, share lived experiences, and collectively address the emotional and structural impacts of financial trauma.
Developing community-led strategic research, campaigns, and innovative support initiatives that restore agency, reduce stigma, and strengthen wellbeing, particularly for ethnic minority groups.
Providing accessible, compassionate financial education and community debt advice that builds long-term resilience and alleviates the fear, shame, and overwhelm often linked to money stress.
Delivering culturally competent, trauma-informed debt advice so individuals can navigate financial crises with hope and dignity for a better future.

The Debt Talk podcasts operate in ways that larger organisations sometimes cannot, particularly in providing community debt advice to the Bangladeshi community and other ethnic minority groups:
We speak in a community-rooted voice that feels familiar and trustworthy, making our discussions on sensitive topics like debt, budgeting, and family pressure culturally relevant and accessible.
We respond quickly to emerging issues without the hindrance of bureaucracy, ensuring that our financial education reaches those who need it most.
By utilizing digital content, we effectively connect with both younger and older generations, addressing their unique challenges.
We listen first, act thoughtfully, and amplify community concerns responsibly, particularly around issues like poverty trauma support.
Our strength lies in our closeness to the people we serve, allowing us to provide tailored assistance that meets their needs.

Debt Talk CIC publishes its first report
Breaking Point to Breaking Through reveals a hidden debt crisis affecting Bangladeshi Londoners, based on community consultations with over 45 residents, frontline workers and statutory organisations in Tower Hamlets.
Despite 63% of Bangladeshi Londoners living in poverty, there is no dedicated, culturally responsive debt advice service for this community. The report shows how shame and honour (izzat), faith-based barriers to interest, informal lending, remittance pressures and intergenerational trauma combine to push families into crisis before they seek help.
Participants were clear: mainstream debt services are not working. Generic advice, interest-based solutions, digital-only access and short-term funding models exclude Bangladeshi lived realities.
The report outlines community-designed solutions, including Bengali-speaking advisors, trauma-informed and faith-aware support, Shariah-compliant credit pathways, holistic debt and wellbeing support, and outreach in trusted community spaces.
Founded in 2025, Debt Talk CIC is the UK’s first Bangladeshi-led debt advice and financial education service, building on proven community-led approaches developed during the COVID-19 response.
This report makes one thing clear: Bangladeshi poverty is specific, structural and solvable — and the time to act is now.
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All proceeds will be invested into community projects and activities.

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Please note that Debt Talk CIC is a private company limited by guarantee without share capital, a community interest company

Breaking Point to Breaking Through reveals a hidden debt crisis affecting Bangladeshi Londoners, based on community consultations with over 45 residents, frontline workers and statutory organisations in Tower Hamlets.
Despite 63% of Bangladeshi Londoners living in poverty, there is no dedicated, culturally responsive debt advice service for this community. The report shows how shame and honour (izzat), faith-based barriers to interest, informal lending, remittance pressures and intergenerational trauma combine to push families into crisis before they seek help.