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Welcome Back!

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

When you support a child overseas, you help their entire community. Lidya is an Ethiopian sponsor child who wants to use her opportunity to help children in need. This is her story.

My name is Lidya. I am now 20 and am in my third year studying medicine at Addis Ababa University, College of Medical Sciences. Along with my university classes, I am a volunteer at the Ethiopian Cancer Society where I serve in various community based awareness activities.

In 1999 when I was five I was enrolled in ChildFund Ethiopia`s program in my village. In 2000 I became sponsored. I was living with my single mum with no shelter and not enough food. My mother couldn`t afford house rent and my school fees. Our daily condition was very devastating. Petty trade, which my mother used to do, was the only means of our livelihood. I felt very happy when I got the chance to enrol in ChildFund`s sponsorship program.

I benefited from so many life changing things from ChildFund`s sponsorship program such as the payment of school fees, provision of uniforms, textbooks, and medical support. The sponsorship program has also been an opportunity to improve my self-expression. The very concept of letter formation was the best experience I have learned during my childhood. As a young child, I experienced the joy of letter writing. Letter writing and pictures were the main means for the communication I had with my sponsor. It was an amazing experience as it was a chance for me to express myself and explain how I feel about my sponsor. It also helped me to develop my skills of letter writing; sometimes even in English.

I also had an amazing experience in recreational visits we used to make to the countryside. Together with letter correspondence and short trainings by ChildFund, the sponsorship program helped me not only in material benefits but also in skills like oral and written communications.

I would like to thank ChildFund for the kind and unreserved support I have been provided.

Like Lidya, Yiheyis was one a child in need of support in Ethiopia. As a sponsor child, she received the educational supported she needed to find her calling. This is her story.

My name is Yiheyis and I am 20 years old. When I was a child, my parents had no viable source of household financial income to make our living. They couldn`t afford my school fees and materials. Our life depended only on my father`s monthly small salary which was not enough to support my family after half of it was paid to rent the small house we lived in. I remember I spent part of my childhood being a street shopper, selling some stuff to cover my school supplies.

The feeling was amazing when I got the chance of sponsorship in ChildFund because I knew the fact that ChildFund sponsorship helps much, especially for my education. After being enrolled in ChildFund Ethiopia, things began to change. I began feeling better about myself, my family and life. It was an amazing experience to enjoy new school materials and clothes every school year since my early grades. I benefited from so many life changing things from ChildFund`s sponsorship program.

It was also very good luck for me to experience new skills like art and painting when I was in high school. In my early childhood, I extremely enjoyed drawing paintings using colour pencils, which ChildFund used to provide me with. I gradually develop an interest in art and I am now a second year Fine Arts student at a reputed vocational training college, which wouldn`t be possible if it was not for ChildFund Ethiopia.

Through my paint sketches, I could express my feelings about my vision of the world, my community and life. Sponsorship helped me much in terms of developing this skill, nurturing me from an early age. Letter writing and its associated skills like reading and writing were also other things I benefited as part of ChildFund`s sponsorship program. The three parts of a letter, the intro, the body and the closing, are my early knowledge of the subject. Letter writing and my paintings were the main ways of communication with my sponsor. It was an amazing experience as it was a chance for me to express myself and tell what I feel about my sponsor. I am so grateful my sponsor decided to help a child overseas.

The sponsorship program helped me not only in materials but in skills like oral and written communication, but more importantly in finding my career niche, which is art. Thank you ChildFund for the help I have been receiving and helping me in my personal development through the process.

It was the first of January 2017 when Sydneysiders Bronwyn Thomas and Mansi Bhatt, both 22, touched down in north Vietnam. They were on their summer break from uni, but this wasn’t a holiday.

As International Development Studies students, Bronwyn and Mansi arrived in Vietnam under a pilot internship program between the School of Social Sciences at UNSW Sydney and ChildFund Australia, supported by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’s New Colombo Plan Mobility Program.

“I think the New Colombo Plan is great. To have Australian students engaging more in our region is really important,” says Bronwyn.

After a two-day induction at ChildFund Vietnam’s National Office in Hanoi, Bronwyn and Mansi headed off to two of Vietnam’s most remote provinces, where they would be based for the duration of their internships.

Mansi’s destination was Bac Kan, where ChildFund has been working for 18 years. In addition to helping ChildFund staff in the office with proposals, project activities, and measuring outputs, observing programs was also a key part of her role.

She explains: “I went to a workshop where I was able to see how community consultations and meetings actually work, how ChildFund engages and builds relationships with people in the community, and how you can make sure community members’ voices are heard.

“I also visited the site of a new road construction in a really small community. It was 400m, so not very long, but the road really needed to be worked on. It was hard for anyone to walk through, especially when it rained, as the road would just be mud,” says Mansi. “It showed me that although some projects are quite small, you`re not necessarily always looking for big changes, and I’ve learnt that small victories for communities are really important as well,” she adds.

When asked how life in rural Vietnam compares to Sydney, Bronwyn admits that “it’s different on every level.” She adds that Cao Bang, where she was based, is one of the most remote places she`s ever been.

Living in an area where English is not widely spoken was a challenge for Bronwyn, but it also inspired her to run two English classes each week in her office: “ChildFund Vietnam is encouraging greater English comprehension among local staff, which I think is important. I loved being able to help with that.”