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You have Gifts for Good in your basket.

Welcome Back!

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

Life is good for 33-year-old Moses Banda.

The father of three runs a grocery stall and works in the food and beverage section at the luxurious Radisson Blu Hotel in Zambia’s capital, Lusaka.

Recently he bought some land in Rufunsa, east of Lusaka city, where he plans to start a farm.

“I plan to go into farming full-time in the next few years,” Moses says.

Life could have easily taken a different path, however. Moses says he’s “very lucky” to have everything he has now.

“I’m what I am today because one person called a sponsor cared enough to ensure that I was healthy and, above all, got the necessary education to enable me to face the future with confidence,” he says.

When he was six years old Moses was enrolled into ChildFund’s sponsorship program. A year later he was sponsored, and his life took a turn.

Growing up in a family with five children and one income – his father worked as a security guard – it was unlikely he or his siblings would go to school.

However, after joining ChildFund’s sponsorship program he found himself among books and classrooms, and envisioning a different future for himself.

“As a result of my sponsorship, my parents never worried about my school requirements as all these were provided by ChildFund,” he says.

“My clothing and shoes were also from ChildFund.”

He threw himself into his studies and was determined to finish grade 12 to get the best chance at life.

After his sponsorship came to an end when he finished grade 10, he began working to pay for his school fees.

“I knew my dad could not afford to pay, and I did not want to stop school, so I paid until I completed grade 12 with the salary I was getting then,” he says.

“I wanted to live a better life than what we had in my father’s house.”

 

Why sponsor a child? For long-time sponsor Geoffrey Fuller the answer is easy.

Sponsorship not only benefits children and their communities, it has a life-changing effect on supporters, Geoffrey says.

“You get back a lot more than you give,” he says.

“You will feel good about it, and it will make a difference to your life as well. And it only costs a few coffees a week.”

The semi-retired IT specialist/accountant has been sponsoring children in remote villages in Uganda for almost 25 years and says people don’t need to make a fortune to help children in disadvantaged communities.

“I have always felt we should help others less fortunate than us,” he says.

“I give support despite a relatively small income so I would encourage all others, especially those on reasonable incomes, to take on child sponsorship.

“We, overall, here in Australia live a lot easier and have a higher quality of living than people in disadvantaged communities overseas.”

Geoffrey became a ChildFund supporter in 1994. He sponsored his first child, Simon, for more than decade (until Simon finished his studies at the age of 24) before signing on as the sponsor for four-year-old Aber in 2006.

The benefit of long-term sponsorship, says Geoffrey, is you get to see how sponsorship works and the changes you’ve contributed to in the communities.

It also helps people from different parts of the world, through the connection of sponsorship, form connections that will last a lifetime.

“It’s not just about giving money, it’s about helping them help themselves,” he says. “You’ve got to get them from simply receiving handouts to being self-sufficient, and that takes time and money.”