Resources

hleleko

Hleleko

South Africa

Ten Thousand Homes provides meals, education, and homes for South Africa’s vulnerable and orphaned children. Their feeding program serves over five hundred children every week. A donation of only five dollars can feed one of these children for an entire month and enable the staff at Ten Thousand Homes to give love and restore dignity to each of these little ones.

Ten Thousand Homes

jacob

Jacob

Thailand

Home of the Open Heart in Northern Thailand assists HIV-affected women and children like Mahlee and Jacob. They provide a range of services for individuals affected by the disease, including education, orphan care, and hospice care. When children lose their parents to HIV, Home of the Open Heart is eager to welcome them into their family. They desire to see each child supported by a team of five sponsors, each contributing forty dollars every month. The funds provide food, clothing, education, and other necessary expenses. Such a small amount of money can make an enormous difference in the life of one child.

Home of the Open Heart

 

 

 

Samuel

Samuel

Uganda

Samuel’s family still lives in Northern Uganda, but has begun serving areas of South Sudan affected by the LRA. His uncle has started construction on a building in Issore, South Sudan. Through this building, Issore will be provided with education for the children, agricultural development for the community, and medical care for the sick. The village has begun rebuilding through the help and encouragement of YWAM Arua. Soon they will be able to leave behind the damage caused by the LRA and begin a new life.

YWAM Arua
babli

Babli

India

Catalyst has rescued a number of girls from slums all over Delhi, India. Each of these young women had a life similar to Babbli’s, but upon entering Catalyst’s program, have had their destiny redefined. By the time they graduate, they will have acquired education, safe housing, and a steady job.

Though Catalyst has been able to rescue many children from the slum, thousands are still living and dying there. Treasure House focuses on working with the ones still suffering in the slums. The center acts as a daycare, keeping the kids off the dangerous streets while providing the basic necessities they cannot even access. They are fed lunch, because it could be the only meal they eat that day. They are given new clothing, because their parents only provide the ratty clothes that portray desperation, bringing them more money when they beg. They are provided with proper hygiene, because it can prevent the most basic fatal illnesses found so often in the slums. They are educated, because future employment could free them from their disadvantaged living situations. One center is currently in operation, but they have started construction on a second building in another part of the city.

The two organizations work closely together and are giving the slum children of Delhi room to fully live and dream again.

Catalyst
Treasure House
Delilah

Delilah

Albania

The Nest in Pogradec, Albania has been working to do just that. Focusing predominantly on Roma gypsies, they provide basic needs, temporary housing, and education for the disadvantaged children of the neighborhood. Because they are so involved in the community, they are able to keep an eye on children vulnerable to harmful situations, diminishing the frequency of trafficking from that area. However, because the idea has been so ingrained into the mindset of these people, the abolition of this custom has proved to be a difficult task. The Nest will continue to fight against the atrocities happening to each of these little ones and the redemption of just one child is reason enough to celebrate.

The Nest

other

Other Resources

Worldwide

Learn more about injustice happening all over the world. Check out the websites below.

PhotogenX
A Voice for the Voiceless
YWAM Kona

 

Akha Outreach Foundation (Thailand)
Destiny Rescue
Nea Zoi (Greece)
Centro De Dia (Argentina)
Che Pibe (Argentina)
Friends of Youth (Washington,US)
House of Hope (Chile)