Showing posts with label ORPHANS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ORPHANS. Show all posts

kigamboni community center (kcc)


 kcc ni kituo kinacholea watoto Yatima na watoto waishio kwenye mazingira magumu
nilipata bahati ya kutembelea,wengi wao ni vijana wadogo wanaohitaji msaada sio tu wa kifedha hata kimawazo pia










kusaidia watoto yatima sio lazima uwe na kitu kikubwa sana,kuna baadhi ya watoto yatima huvaa nguo moja tu mwaka mzima unaweza wapa hao watoto kama una nguo imekuruka badala
ya kuitupa shimon,Nenda kaitupe kwa hawa Watoto yatima ambao wapo vituo mbali mbali.Kwao itakuwa kama sikukuu na ni mpya tena sana.
Yatima wanahitaji sio tu hzo nguo wanahitaji pia
 chakula,
 sehemu ya kulala,
  elimu,
huduma za ziada kama Hospital n.k.

Ngoja niwape siri,Kusaidia watoto yatima ni sehem ya uwekezaji pia hakuna ajuaye kesho yake.Mungu hawezi kukuacha hata siku moja tena atakuheshim sana kuwa miongoni mwa watu wachache wenye upendo

ningependa kutafakari nawew hili neno la Mungu kutoka katika kitabu cha MATHAYO MTAKATIFU 25:34-40
"kisha mfalme atawaambia wale walioko mkono wake wa kuume,Njoni,mliobarikiwa na Baba yangu,urithini ufalme mliowekewa tayari tangu kuumbwa ulimwengu
kwa maana nalikuwa na njaa mkanipa chakula,nalikuwa na kiu mkaninywesha,nalikuwa mgeni mkanikaribisha,nalikuwa uchi mkanivika nalikuwa mgonjwa mkaja kunitazama
Ndipo wenye haki watakapo mjibu wakisema  ,Bwana ni lini tulipokuona una njaa tukakulisha au kiu tukakunywesha?
Na mfalme atajibu ,akiwaambia,Amin ,nawaambia,kadiri mlivyomtendea mmojawapo wa hao ndugu zangu walio wadogo,mlinitendea mimi"

Ubarikiwe sana na Roho wa Mungu akuongoze baada ya kusoma makala hii, aufanye moyo wako kuwa mwepesi na kuona umuhimu wa kuwasaidia hawa ndugu zetu Yatima
sio lazima usaidie KCC vituo viko vingi sana Tanzania hata nje ya Tanzania.hicho ulicho nacho usione ni kidogo ni kikubwa sana kwa Wahitaji we peleka tu chochote na Mungu atafanya kitu juu ya Maisha yako

kwa KCC kituo kipo Kigamboni karibu na Mikadi beach au unaweza wasiliana na wakuu wa kituo kama utapata nafasi ya kuwatembelea

contact:0753 226 662
        0788 48 26 84
        0713 747 602 katibu kcc 

Korogwe Orphanage Centre(KOC)


About  Korogwe Orphanage Centre(KOC)

    Korogwe Orphanage Centre(KOC)operates in Korogwe District, Tanga region, Tanzania. Korogwe is located in one of Tanzania’s poorest regions, which is often overlooked by NGOs because of its limited infrastructure and service provision. The area is badly affected by HIV/AIDS and lacks the resources necessary to provide assistance to AIDS victims or to develop effective prevention strategies. Many children in the area have been orphaned as a result of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and are themselves infected with the disease. Many of these have no relatives to which to turn, and must stay with already poor families in the nearby villages of  Kwa Msisi,Msufini, Madumu, Chekelei, and Kwakole. Others are forced to wander the streets due to lack of resources and parental guidance.

Most of these children do not attend school. All suffer because of lack of family discipline, inability to access skill-building programs or education, and insufficient nutrition, clothing, and health care. The lack of these basic needs in turn makes the children even more vulnerable to sexual abuse, HIV/AIDS infection, illness, and labor exploitation.

KOC was formed in 2005 to combat the situation of local children and youths. The Korogwe Youth Vocational Center, an offshoot of KOC, was established in May 2006 and is well positioned to support orphans identified by the parent organization as at-risk. Together, the organizations seek to support the orphans of Korogwe District in gaining access to education, health care, and daily interactions necessary for the development of healthy children and youths. To this end, the KOC presently provides daytime nursery education and limited medical care. In addition, KOC seeks to develop an arts cooperative of local widows who currently serve as caretakers and who wish to market their goods online to raise operational funds for the new school, increasing the project’s likelihood of sustainability,  teaching the women how to be self-reliant by training them in tailoring, pottery making, etc.
           


The Children:
In Korogwe District there are more than 500 orphans. The Centre currently supports 97 boys and girls between the ages of 2 and 18. Of these, 10 are fully supported by the Centre and the rest live with grandparents or other people in the local community. With funding, by January, 2013 we expect the number of youth we are supporting to increase to 200. The goal is to be able to support at least 250 youth at the Centre.

Besides giving the children clothes, food, and shelter, Korogwe Orphanage Centre(KOC)provides supplementary lessons for the children in its care as well as children from the local community. International volunteers teach classes in English, Mathematics, Social Studies, and Science twice a day.

Overseas funding is being sought for the development of the site. The Centre has its own building now. Some of the land has been converted to a vegetable garden, the produce of which will be used and sold by the Centre.

KOC has just finished the building of two classrooms and a teachers' office, which is serving as a base for its activities and as a Pre-School centre.
The two classrooms are large, accommodating 45 children per session, and each contains a blackboard. There are two toilets available conveniently as well(One for Children and the other one for adults).
The Pre-School opened its doors to the public in March, 2012. Already there are 200 children registered with KOC, and 97 of them are able to attend the Pre-School every weekday. Another 45 (of this 200), ages 7 to 15, receive limited financial support from the Centre for tuition fees, books, uniforms, etc.
Future Aims:

1  To build and facilitate a small primary school to accommodate children completing basic education      at the Pre-School centre and also older children.
2   To build and facilitate a small secondary school to accommodate children completing education at       the KOC primary school and also older children.
3  To partner with local businesses to provide the opportunity for vocational training.
4  To build a pool for keeping fish (approximately one hectare)
 To build two more classrooms as part of the Pre-School.
6  To establish a Pre-School centre in each of the wards of Korogwe Town.
7  To establish a partnership with an overseas volunteering agency, enabling foreign volunteers to help physically and financially with future development projects under the guidance of KOC.

It is the greatest desire of KOC to gradually establish such projects within each of the wards of Korogwe Town, thus giving stability and a prosperous future to each and every child living in difficult circumstances with no hope of living a decent life. Every one of KOC children are valued as growing individuals and know that they have people to turn to when they are in need.


Friends who have contributed so far:
1 Local government by providing 1 hectare of the 5 hectares that we have
2 Board members - all board members make regular financial contributions to the needs of the Centre      and in particular the ten children that are fully within its care.
In addition:
(a)   Mr. Mhina (Village Chairman) - by organising and monitoring all day to day activities;
(b) Musa Twaha Kitonge (Swahili and Culture teacher) - by promoting KOC, looking for volunteers          and donors;
(c)  Benjamin Kinyamasongo (Swahili and Culture teacher) - by promoting KOC, looking for                     volunteers and donors;
(d) Maimuna  Hussein - by helping chairman;
(e)  Mwanaisha Kallaghe - by helping chairman;
(f)   Salehe Mzige (Accountant for the Municipality of  Korogwe) - by helping KOC with accounts

3  Friends from Australia by doing local fundraising to help with purchasing uniforms, books, etc. (Sheree Lette, Miranda Wilkson, Katie Melinda from the organisation Friends of Korogwe)


AMANI CENTRE SILVER



Dear friend
It’s with great honor that Amani Centre is writing to you. We are writing to you as we appreciate that you have passed through Amani as a volunteer/field placement student/donor/partner. We remember and respect your participation in various development activities at Amani Center. Your contribution was very useful to us and will always be remembered; as we mark these 25 years silver jubilee you are part of the team.

This message is to inform you that Amani centre is reaching silver jubilee of 25 years since establishment in 1992. For all these years we have seen Amani grow from the Mango tree to storey build. We have seen the first disabled children being adults, we have seen the children with disabilities gets married, we have seen the student for field placement accomplish their dreams and pursue their careers, we have seen volunteers gain and upgrade their skills for their careers, from social workers, to physiotherapists and teachers. For us this is a matter of thanks giving to God as Amani Centre has become a father, mother and caregiver for people with disabilities and those without disabilities.

Since we are going to make the 25-year jubilee, we planned of starting a campaign in order to solicit some funds to mark the Day. Amani Centre Silver Jubilee celebrations are planned to be on September 2017.  We hope to bring the parents and their children with disabilities and our young people with disabilities who have now become adults and they have their own families, preferably, we would like to invite some volunteers (at their own cost) from abroad who are ready to share their experiences on how they know Amani Centre. On Jubilee day we will have time to acknowledge the positive impact of the deceased, remember them and give respect.

However, we expect to make evaluation for Amani Centre Activities and its impact to the Tanzania and Morogoro communities since establishment. So as to understand where we did wrong and where we did right for the future positive running of organization.

With this message and you as a person who have worked/lived with the Amani centre community, we ask you to be part of the organizing committee of this jubilee, for you to contribute but also to encourage others to donate any amount they are owed in order to achieve this jubilee.

We need to hire external evaluator from the Jordan University Morogoro that may cost us USD3000, the work that will take 37 days to be accomplished.
Jubilee ceremony itself may cost USD2000, food and recreation, preparation of different events, transportation, appreciation gift, etc.
Thus, we need USD 5000 before August 2017.

We will be pleased if you will help us source the funds from friends, relatives and organizations, so as we can mark this important day for the Amani centre and for the poor disabled that we have served for 25 years.

Let’s stretch our hands for others, be the voice for the voiceless. Together we can.

 CONTACT US

Reach the organizing team through:-
mkigollo@yahoo.com
amani_centre@yahoo.com
beatussewando@gmail.com


Rev. Fr. Beatus Sewando
Amani Centre Director       

Contact Details
Fr. Beatus Sewando
Diocese of Morogoro
Amani Centre for Person with Disabilities
P.O. Box 579
Morogoro, Tanzania
Phone: +255-23-2603982
Fax: +255-23-2600829
Mobile: +255-754-314412

Sanganigwa Children`s Home


     The “Sanganigwa Children`s Home” orphanage is situated in Kigoma, one of the most isolated and undeveloped areas of Tanzania. It gives hospitality to children and teenagers from 4 to 24 years old (the age of the orphans is more or less approximate due to the lack of documents regarding the birth of each child). The children belong to different ethnic and religious groups, and most of them are orphans because of AIDS.


Some ildren arrived at the Sanganigwa centre after they had been living on the streets, where they put up with the most humiliating and hardest jobs. The children and teenagers who are orphans or abandoned are reported by the police or the local Catholic Church, when nobody is able to take care of them. Sometimes they still have relatives, but they are extremely poor and in many cases they are already taking care of other children of the family.

Sanganigwa is under the jurisdiction of the local Catholic church and it is owned by the Tanzanzian Government. It was founded in 1995 by the educator Astrid Jangaard thanks to the financial support of NORAD (Norwegian agency for cooperation and development) and by Archbishop Paul Ruzoka of the Kigoma Diocese. In 1997 it felt into a dramatic economic crisis.
     
In 1998 Daniela De Donno Mannini, founder of the non-profit organization “The Jane Goodall Institute Italia ONLUS” (JGI Italia), took responsibility for the orphanage and started a distance adoption program in Italy, to support the children of Sanganigwa. Since then, the project is alive thanks to the financing of those who, sensitive to solidarity, want to contribute to the children’s maintenance. Today, the Italian JGI provides the Home with medical assistance, food, recreational and cultural activities (choir, acrobatics), school education (primary, secondary, college, vocational training), environmental education and private tuitions. Moreover, we support the salaries of the Sanganigwa centre workers each of whom has a numerous family to maintain.. We built a play ground, a welding workshop, and started specific small-scale breeding projects for cows, chicken, and ducks. We take care of maintaining the structures, carry out community surveys, psycho-pedagogic assistance, community integration, and planning the entry of boys and girls in the working life. We provide Sanganigwa with clothes, shoes, linen and scholastic materials. More activities are carried out by our Organization to guarantee an optimal functionality of the House, for which the JGI Italia is helped by Italian public Institutions. For example, an infirmary and a library have just been opened through the support of Regione Puglia; we have a tailor’s project addressed to Kigoma street-children, with the contribution of the City Hall of Pelago (Florence); we are active on the side of children rights, and we organized a seminar with the support of Livorno’s Province addressed to the local authorities, and to the other attaining associations, developing a network on the territory on children rights.

     Coordinated by the social worker Kenneth Hageze, the orphanage consists of a kitchen (with charcoal cooker) joined to the refectory, a classroom, four dormitories with bathroom, a office, two storerooms, a building that is currently been restored in order to be used as an infirmary, a lodging for four nuns, a lodging for two social assistant (who are husband and wife), a stable outside the house and a hen-house. From Monday to Friday children attend school, some of them in the town of Kigoma, others in one of the bordering towns. After lunch they study with some teachers employed by us to integrate their school curriculum; afterwards children take care of their surroundings: they look after the domestic animals, they learn to cultivate vegetables or to do housework. Children with relatives still alive get in touch with them, and once a year they have the possibility of going back to their villages. This is organized by us in order not to loose their family ties and to make the
reintroduction in their community easier. After the primary school (that lasts seven years) we direct children towards the secondary or the technical school (vocational training), depending on their ability. They have the possibility of becoming electricians, mechanics, carpenters, dressmakers, etc... In Kigoma there aren’t any technical schools: for this reason girls and boys who attend these schools catch the train everyday or, most of the time, they sleep in lodgings annexed to the schools. In these cases we pay a fee and supply the girls and boys with all they need, even money to buy soap, hygienic wipes, razors, etc. After secondary school, boys and girls can decide to join a college, such as: tourism, nautical, art. Periodically they come back to the Sanganigwa centre, their home. After they finish school we buy them all they need to start a job (a sewing machine, tools for carpenters, electricians, etc.) and we pay the rent of a room in a family for a whole year. We also buy a mattress, a table and a chair.

      The most widespread diseases among children of this area are dermatitis, intestinal infections, respiratory infections, malaria and typhus. Malaria, in spite of mosquito-nets, strikes children even three or four times a year. It’s not always necessary to take children to the hospital every time, as the testing can be carried out at the nearest clinic (on payment) and the disease can be treated at the Sanganigwa centre. After treatment, the children need a long convalescence period to fully recover. Over the last years typhus has became more frequent and strikes scholastic age children. We think that they are infected at school, where they drink un-boiled running water.
We buy AIDS medicines at Tanga Town (about 1800 km from us). Medicines are mailed to us monthly.

Most of the children have seen their parents die from AIDS, in other cases they were neglected or nobody knows if their parents are still alive. Sometimes they have been living with a relative who was unable to bring them up: many often they were left alone all day long without food, or they have been living with prostitutes or criminals who abused them. One of our children saw his mother killed for ethnic reasons. Children who suffered for these reasons need psycho-pedagogical support. We found this support in the Italian volunteer Francesca Chiellini who works with the children for three months each year. We consider continuing with this practice very important, because is the only way for children to overcome their traumas, to develop their self-esteem, to strengthen their personalities.

Furthermore, Sanganigwa is a concrete and important place where homeless children come (about 280); they all come from Kigoma and we try to involve them in social activities (choir, acrobatics, psycho-pedagogical program). We hope in this way to keep them busy and to give them a chance. In case of medical emergencies or urgent surgery we try to do our best by intervening and sometimes we contribute by giving them food.




Sustaining the project in the long term

After having guaranteed basic support and education, the construction of family houses is planned to guarantee that the children grow in an environment similar to that of a real family (instead of dormitories, refectory and communal rooms).
We also plan to create new work opportunities (such as soap and paper manufacturing), and to construct and organize workshops for dressmakers, arts and crafts, clock repairers, and also for repairing tires, bicycles, soldering, carpentry, etc..

The Sanganigwa centre needs a food and drinks area and shops to sell merchandise and to offer professional competences in order to make the Sanganigwa centre autonomous.




Helping Sanganigwa - distance sponsorship programme

The daily running of the Sanganigwa orphanage is possible thanks to the distance sponsorship programme, launched in 1998 by JGI Italy, which targets private citizens. The donors, who are all Italian, receive a six-monthly or annual update on the progress of the children’s home, a photo and a drawing. In addition specific donations allows us to realise individual projects, for example: the renovation of the buildings, the animal enclosures, the playground, the “duck” project, the workshop for welding, the library, the infirmary, the psycho-pedagogic project to help the children overcome trauma and develop self respect, and seminars on children’s rights that involve the community as a whole. Over the years the Nando Peretti Foundation (NPF) has made an extremely valuable contribution to the work of JGI Italia for the Sanganigwa Children's Home. Moreover, the NPF, together with three other private Italian donors, will play a part in the construction of ten family houses, which will replace the current dormitories.

The demands for the adequate growth and maintenance of Sanganigwa are still numerous: workers need to be kept up-to-date, we must assure psycho-pedagogical support to the children all year round, we should increase the staff, we need a bus to be able to transport the children and also to transport hay for the cows and coal for cooking. We have to install a solar heating system (electricity and cookers), to undertake a socio-economic study focusing on the labor demands in the region, in order to favor our girls and boys after studies or training. We need to create new opportunities for them such as paper and soap manufacturing, shoe making, etc., to create workshops for the sale of merchandise with the aim of making the centre autonomous.

Moreover, we must guarantee a better life for street-children. The JGI Italy plays an active role in supporting the street children of the city both through training programmes and micro credit projects as well as direct humanitarian aid (medical assistance and food).
The project concerning the Kigoma street children still requires the basics (buildings, food, medical care, education).

To allow the children’s home to function properly, and for the sake of the children themselves, visits are discouraged by all the partners in the project. Sadly, due to the invasiveness of western tourists, the Sanganigwa staff have been obliged to say that the orphanage is not a zoo. The privacy and safety of the children are as important for us as their healthy and peaceful development. Under certain circumstances visits to the children’s home can be arranged with the project partners as a direct consequence of the sincerity of the donor and the specific project presented and supported.

In the children to eat well, go to school and receive medical treatment is essential guarantee continuity to our project and contribute monthly to the orphanage’s expenses.
With a monthly contribution of 51 €uro, - 0,35 €uro a day! – you can help the children to grow with greater hope for the future. Your precious aid will be used to offer them food, medical treatment and the opportunity to study. You’ll receive a group photo of the children and we’ll update you annually on their progress. You can make your donation to our post office account

Our commitment to helping these children is absolute


     We believe that, in order to make the economic aid for food, medical treatment and schooling effective, Sanganigwa’s children have to be monitored during their studies until they begin a professional career, respecting the individual talent and personality of each child. Only in this way will ours be a realistic contribution, so that in the future their own children won’t have to face the same difficulties.

With a Little Help You Can Change a Child’s Life

Justification of the Project


The Kigoma district, with Kigoma as chief town (and the rural area) is situated along Lake Tanganigwa in the extreme west of Tanzania; it borders with Burundi and the D.R. of Congo.
It’s one of the poorest and least developed areas of Tanzania, and also of the world. According to the U.N.D.P. (United Nations Development Program) report of 2002 the index of human development of Tanzania, that is a Country with a low human development, is 151/173, the annual per capita income is $523; 59.7%of its population lives under the poverty threshold (less than $2 a day); life expectancy is 51.1 years old, the fertility rate is of 5.4 children for each woman of fertile age, the infant mortality rate is 94.8% of each children born alive and the percentage of registration at primary school is 48%; the percentage falls dramatically to 6% for high school . Kigoma has a population of 1,674,047 inhabitants (more than 86% live in the country) with an annual demographic increase of 4.3-4.5%; 60% of its population is less than 19 years old.

There are less than 300 schools in the area with a rate of registration of about 20% of the school age population. While analyzing such percentages it is important to note that the female registration figures at primary school fall well below the male figures, even though the female population (869,413) is higher than the male population (804,634). A large percentage of female drops out from school: it is caused by juvenile pregnancies, even during primary school age. In the area of Kigoma, for example, between 1982 and 1990 the percentage of females and males registered at school wasn’t so different (45% of those registered were female and 55% were male) but already in high school, for the same period, of those registered 33% were female and 66% were male. According to the latest statistics of the Ministry of Public Education most of Kigoma teenagers finish elementary school but only 10% continue to study. Furthermore, the standard of scholastic infrastructures, scholastic materials, the level of student education and the preparation of teachers is very poor; the scholastic methodology is still based on a mnemonic learning method and on an authoritative way to teach that includes physical violence, without the slightest attention to the demand of education and the development of personality, in other words the present scholastic system doesn’t prepare young people for a civilized and productive introduction into society, neither does it prepare them for their emotional and cognitive development. Even basic scholastic investments and policies are lacking. For example, not even 1 student out of 3 at primary school has a book.

In addition to knowing about the endemic conditions of poverty, disease, underdevelopment, the lack of infrastructures and basic resources common to many African sub-Saharan areas.
Since 1993 the Kigoma region has been hit by the arrival, in various waves, of at least 400,000 refugees who fled from the ethnic wars of bordering Burundi. This had a strong, negative environmental and social impact, and a pandemic spread of HIV/AIDS, that is still, in spite of all the efforts, a problem that is still far from any solution.

Every year hundreds of men, women and children die, especially between 14 and 45 years old, causing a generational gap, right in the most productive age. Furthermore, AIDS is more widespread among the female population: which has caused a higher number of orphans and homeless children, and the lack of adult females prevents the traditional practice of welcoming the orphans into an enlarged family.

After these preliminary remarks it is easy to comprehend the dramatic childhood conditions, which are also lacking in the most fundamental rights, such as love, care, protection and education. Children are often exploited, neglected, and suffer various forms of psychologic and physical violence whether from within the family or institutions. Political support for children and the family is lacking. There is also a lack of pedagogical culture, even from within the State organizations set up for this aim. In particular there is a lack of understanding to promote the education and the development of childhood and adolescence and a strong and efficient investment for a social, economic development for the whole community and for the Country itself. At present in the Kigoma area, there are two centers that give hospitality to AIDS orphans and neglected children, which are the “Sanganigwa Children’s home”, the orphanage supported by the JGI Italy, property of the Tanzanian Government and of the local Catholic Church, that shelters 61 children from 3 years old upwards, and the “Sanganigwa B”, an initial reception centre for homeless children.


Did you know?
90% of the work force in Tanzania is devoted to farming.
Tanzanian women walk for up to 6 hours to get the wood to cook for 5 days.

Did you know?
In Tanzania almost 50% of the population is under 15 years old.

Did you know?
In the Kigoma region, families’ annual per-capita income is lower than 100 dollars ( about 113 €uro) and it costs 70 dollars (about 180 €uro) a year to attend secondary school.

Did you know?
An American citizen consumes as much as 179 Tanzanian citizens.

Did you know?
On average, life expectancy in Tanzania is 46 years, 30 years less than in Italy.

Did you know?
67.8% of the population in Tanzania can read, but only 56.8% of women can read and write.

Did you know?
The majority of children in Tanzania speaks two languages, the tribal dialect and the national language (Swahili), in addition to English which is learnt at school.

To allow children Sanganigwa to feed properly, go to school and be treated is essential to ensure continuity to our work and contribute to the orphanage monthly expenses.
It would take 51 € uro per month to keep a child at the orphanage Sanganigwa , but we realize that this figure can be a big commitment for many families. For this we ask you to contribute a minimum spend of 11 € uro per month - 0.35 € uro per day! So you can help children to grow up with some more hope for the future. Your invaluable contribution will serve to provide them with adequate food, medical care and the opportunity to study. You will receive a group of children photography and will be updated annually on their progress.

With your help we can:

Tanzanians support children orphaned by AIDS, through the project "Sanganigwa";

involve more and more young people around the world through " Roots & Shoots " (Roots and Shoots), our international program for environmental and humanitarian efforts;
to support this program please send them an email adress: info@janegoodall.it .


Orphan Rescue......No One Wants Me!



Imagine being a child hiding behind a pile of trash or in the nearby woods watching as a stranger kills your father during a civil uprising in your village. Your father was the only thing that stood between you, your siblings and your mother starving – and now he is gone. You become a quick study in begging – not difficult when it has been over 24 hours since you have had even a handful of rice.

“Thou [God] are the helper of the fatherless” (Psalm 10:14).

Ultimate Betrayal

Mom died just two months ago; and Dad is left to care for his four children. He is ready to start over, but four kids make it difficult to attract a new wife. One morning he takes them to the local train station and tells them he will be back with something to eat. Hours go by, night falls; Daddy is not back. Scared, they curl up together for safety and warmth – not moving from where he told them to stay. They want him to find them in the dark. After 24 hours, the oldest of the four (age 10) realizes that daddy is not coming back. He is not sure why, but instinctively he knows.

The oldest asks a passer-by for a little food or money to buy something to eat for himself and his siblings. The youngest – age two – is crying. He is hungry and wants his daddy. He finds a small ditch with dirty water in it and before his older sister can stop him, he has cupped his little hands to drink what will make him very sick in a few hours. Our prayer?

Lord, help us find these children in time!

Hope Homes
Rescuing Orphaned, Abandoned and At-Risk children

Our orphanages – we call them Hope Homes – are where children rescued from abuse, sex trafficking, abandonment, the slums, leper colonies, or life on the streets where drugs and alcohol draw the naive and scared, are brought to and given a chance for a real life. They receive physical, emotional, medical, and educational help. Most importantly, they are introduced to their heavenly Father who will never leave or forsake them! Considered as “untouchable” by the high caste in India, we teach them that they are precious in God’s eyes. They are not a mistake!

In his book To Uplift Dalit’s & Underprivileged, Dr. M. A. Thomas writes: “This earth is one state and all of mankind is one people…No child is born into this world by mistake. Without God’s permission no child can be born or formed!” Therefore, Hopegivers welcomes every child with open arms and all are raised as the valuable children of God they are.

Become a Sponsor

orphan rescueOur orphans sponsorship program is unique. When you contribute to a Hope Home – which provides 24/7 holistic care for every child living there – you are not just caring for one specific child. You are helping us care for ALL of the children living in that home. When one child grows up and leaves, your money continues to support other children who pour into our Hope Homes daily all over Africa.

Our Hope Homes provide necessary life support for the children…
1. Emotionally: They live in a family environment filled with love, guidance and many brothers and sisters.
2. Mentally: All receive an education and vocational training when possible.
3. Physically: Shelter, food, water, clothing, and medical care.
4. Spiritually: They are introduced to Jesus Christ and to the heavenly Father who loves each one of them.

Partner for the Long Term

orphan rescueConsider joining with your friends, family, Sunday school class or your church congregation to sponsor some or all of the children in one Hope Home. Our Hope Homes care for as few as 10 and as many as 1000 children at one time. $35 a month helps to sponsor one child, but every dollar is appreciated because every dollar helps us make a difference in the life of a child.

“Defend the poor and the fatherless: do justice to the afflicted and needy. Deliver the poor and needy: rid them out of the hand of the wicked” (Psalm 82:3).

IMAGINE YOU LOOSE YOUR PARENTS RIGHT NOW.........


The loving bond between a child and a parent is one of the most beautiful, sacred, and important relationships in the world.

A parent plays an irreplaceable role in the life of a child—influencing physical, mental, and emotional well-being. This impact is felt through all of life, well beyond teenage years and into adulthood. A parent is a role model, care-giver, teacher, nourisher, provider, safe place, and so much more.

But what about the millions of children in the world living as orphans? For these children, it’s likely they’ll face more challenges from an earlier age. Those challenges range from abandonment to abuse to hunger and many other things.

Life for a child living as an orphan is often difficult and painful.

Here are four struggles children living as orphans are likely to face:

Parents significantly impact a child’s communication skills. Children living without loving parents often experience more difficulty expressing their needs and emotions.
Loving families provide children with a sense of security and stability. Children living as orphans often lack both of these vital things, which can cause unique developmental challenges and trauma that may take a lifetime to work through.
Parents help nurture and support their children, but children living as orphans do not have this secure presence. Often times, these children struggle to stay healthy and nourished because of a lack of resources.
Students with involved parents tend to earn higher grades and have more opportunities to develop needed social skills, while children without parents will have to work much harder to achieve the same things.
For both children with parents and those without, the unconditional love of the Father is unending. God sees them, hears them, and knows the desires of their heart. Every child everywhere is deeply loved by God, and nothing can ever change that.

God’s love for children living as orphans means something for us. It means that we must step into their need and do whatever we can to help every child come to know the love and protection of a family.

It means we must ask what God has called us to do, and then do that with all of our might.

The reality of a child living without parents is part of our broken world, but we believe every child needs to know the love of a family.