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Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

When Australian couple Elaine and Perry reconnected with their first sponsored child after more than two decades, Elaine welled-up upon learning that her support and advice over the years had changed the course of a life.

“I sat there and read all the sponsor letters and had a tear in my eye and thought, he’s listened to everything I’ve said,” Elaine says.

“Samuel always says to me, you taught me how important it is to learn.

“I don’t think he’s changed. He was really determined when he was young.”

This is the story of an enduring relationship between a child and their sponsors, and how child sponsorship changes lives.

‘Our own kids don’t even have a picture of us on their wall!’

It had been more than 22 years since Queenslanders Perry and Elaine had heard from their first sponsored child Samuel, who lived in a disadvantaged community in Uganda. The last time was when Samuel was a teenager.

When Samuel contacted them online, he had become a man, had his own family and owned his own business. At first Perry and Elaine did not recognise his adult photos, , but it all fell into place as they shared old photos they had sent each other during the sponsorship program.

“Samuel sent me a photo of our wedding and all these photos of my kids that I sent him over the years,” Elaine says.  “He has a photo on his wall of Perry and I when we got married. I said to Perry, ‘our own kids don’t even have a picture of us on their wall!’”

How child sponsorship transformed Samuel’s life

Elaine and Perry have always known that their sponsorship through ChildFund can help change a child’s life, but it was only when Samuel reached out to them that they realised their extent of their impact.

When the day dawns, 13-year-old Bote Son is the first in her family to awake. She is up and about, getting ready for school.

Education has always been important to her, Bote Son (pictured above) says. “My greatest desire is to learn and to be educated,” she says.

The teen, who has a disability that makes it difficult for her to walk and use her hands, gets to school in a wheelchair. She started school for the first time two years ago when ChildFund Myanmar began running non-formal education classes for children from disadvantaged backgrounds in Yangon,

This program is supported by the Australian Government through
the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (ANCP). It is also supported by ChildFund Deutschland and Myanmar-Kinderhilfe Stiftung.

Over the past couple of years, Bote Son has learnt to read and write for the first time in her life. She is also learning maths, Burmese and English.

She is an enthusiastic student, says her teacher Thida. “Bote Son tries hard. She is the most active student in my class and she has never missed a day of school.”

Bote Son’s mother Kyi says she has always wanted her daughter to go to school, but the limited opportunities for children with disability in government-run schools in Myanmar has meant it has been impossible to enrol Bote Son into the formal education system.

Private schools have been out of the question because she and her husband cannot afford to pay the fees. Kyi makes and sells brooms, while her husband is a taxi driver; their income is irregular and unreliable.