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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.

Each year our friends at Kingston School in Indonesia organise a fundraiser to support other children around the world through ChildFund Australia. The whole school, from preschool to secondary, gets involved. In 2014, they turned their attention to the plight of street children in Myanmar and decided to raise money to support ChildFund Myanmar`s programs to stop child trafficking.

The giant fundraiser kicked off with some wonderful dancing from the kindy kids. One class chose to perform a traditional Batak dance from Lake Toba (pictured above). When this dance is performed it is customary for the audience to place money between the dancers’ fingers. The Kingston Kindergarteners were so good that their fingers were overflowing with rupiah! Others chose ballet, hip-hop dancing and one class even dressed up as flowers.

Principal and long-time ChildFund Australia sponsor Ms Yin helps organise the fundraiser every year. Of the Kindergarteners’ efforts, she says: “It certainly was a great start. Everyone was spurred on to raise even more money. I actually had to issue a warning that the next week was exam week so the students needed to study and postpone fundraising until after the exams!”

The Christmas Bazaar was the main event with all the students dressed in red and green. There was music, magic shows and drama performances, stalls offering delicious treats and handmade trinkets, and even an auction.

“The auction I had to keep an eye on. One student asked if she could auction off her violin!” says Ms Yin. “I am not sure her mum would have been very pleased about that.”

The students love the annual fundraiser, which they say is amazingly fun and rewarding. This year Kindergarten took out the top honour raising a huge 8.5 million rupiah (approximately AU$850), closely followed by Year Seven and Year Five.

“You might wonder why Kingston is so into fundraising,” says Abiyu, a student journalist reporting for the school magazine. “It is because we need to be helping other people who are in need, people who are suffering outside of our little Kingston world.”

Altogether the school raised almost $5,000 to support child protection programs in Myanmar. This brings their total fundraising to nearly $15,000 in support of children living in poverty since 2011!

Nuren works in East Nusa Tenggara in Indonesia, training community health volunteers (known as cadres) and families about keeping infants and young children healthy and safe.

Since 2011 she has travelled to homes and clinics in remote villages, where women traditionally have given birth without access to prenatal care or emergency assistance when it`s needed.

This work started as part of ChildFund and UNICEF’s joint project, REACH, promoting improved health care for pregnant women and young children to help lower the infant mortality rate. REACH may have ended in December 2013, but the health care training continues to make a big difference in the communities today.

Most health cadres come from non-medical backgrounds, so they received regular support and monitoring during the project`s duration. Nuren’s routine visits helped to remind the volunteers how to provide basic health services, and she would also check the amount of medical supplies to make sure health posts were fully stocked. Some visits took hours to accomplish.