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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.

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.”

 

When a group of Sydney students started sponsoring a child in Uganda, they had no idea the impact they would make. Raphael was one of many children in need following 23 years of war in his homeland. Today he is a grown man and ready to pass on the support he received. His story shows what happens when you help a child in need.

Life was simply so challenging before I was sponsored. I am one of 15 children. My father made just $50 a month to support us so it was very hard for my family to secure school fees for us all. It was compounded by the war we had for 23 years. When I was introduced to ChildFund it was a turning point in my life.

When I was a child we were dispersed from home to live in a camp due to the civil war. Outside it was unsafe but it was also not safe inside the camp as the enemy would sometimes come in and raid for food, to kill or steal children.

I lived with my family in a makeshift home in the camp from the late 1990s until 2006. When we moved to the camp the focus moved from education to security. During this time children were detached from schools. We could not put on lights to study at night time because the enemy would find you.

I was sponsored at 12 years old when I was in grade six. The biggest benefit of being a sponsored child for me was school fees. I didn’t have to worry about school fees anymore. Instead I could concentrate on my studies.

Sponsorship pulled me from nowhere to being able to have a good life in Uganda. It was like a bridge. If that bridge had not been there I would not have been able to get to the other side.

Even as a child I knew that education was most important because if I am educated, all the rest will come. Before my last year of primary school, me and a friend spoke to the ChildFund officer and said we wanted to be transferred to a better school. He assisted us with the application. Our parents didn’t come with us and the school was afraid we wouldn’t be able to pay our fees. We told them, “It’s okay, we are with ChildFund” and it was okay. I turned out to be one of their best students.