Welcome Back!

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.

17 October is the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, which this year recognises people living in poverty as critical partners for fighting the development challenges we face.

Child sponsorship has the power to change the life of a family in need. Annet was just six years old when she was sponsored through ChildFund. Here we tell Annet’s story, and discuss the impact child sponsorship had on her childhood, particularly her education.

The youngest of seven children

Annet’s family scraped by on a meagre income, Annet`s father was a farmer, who grew peanuts and maize, and her mother sold fish at the local market.

Growing up in Uganda while Joseph Kony and the LRA were terrorising the country`s north, she faced a difficult and unstable childhood. “I grew up in a lot of different places. My family had to move from our village when I was 8 years old. I stayed behind to live with a neighbour because my parents wanted me to remain in the ChildFund program. Eventually I had to leave when I was 12 because war broke out. I went to live in Soroti town [in eastern Uganda] with various family members.”

How our sponsorship program keeps children in school

Sponsorship gave Annet the opportunity to stay in school. “When I was eight, ChildFund built a new classroom at our school and provided us all with desks. I remember before we used to sit on the floor or study under the trees. When it rained, there were no classes.”

Through sponsorship, her family also received a cow and a few goats, the income from which helped to pay for Annet`s secondary school fees, books and after-school tutoring. “Unfortunately, the goats were stolen from our family during the war,” Annet recalls, “but to this day we still have the offspring from that cow. We still get milk and breed the cows to sell.”

How a quality education provides a brighter future

Having completed her school education, Annet is now studying to become a nurse in Uganda`s capital, Kampala, a career that will enable her to stand on her own two feet.

“I want to work in healthcare because if you have your health, you can do anything. People here lack basic information about the prevention of diseases. I want to be part of the group that helps to educate people.”

How child sponsorship can help break the cycle of poverty

Annet`s story is just one example of how sponsorship can help break the cycle of poverty. In fact, globally, the world has made significant strides in overcoming extreme poverty, reducing by half the proportion of people living in extreme poverty, ahead of the target date set in the Millennium Development Goals (MDG).

“When world leaders agreed the Millennium Development Goals in 2000, many of us thought that they were too ambitious,” says Mark McPeak, ChildFund Australia`s international program director. “Thirteen years later the picture is clear, and we note in particular the achievement of MDG 1 (reducing the global proportion of people living in extreme income poverty by half) in 2010, five years ahead of the MDG target date of 2015.

“This is a significant event in human history, with around 700 million fewer people living in extreme income poverty today than in 1990, according to the United Nations. And even though these numbers are biased significantly by the long period of economic growth experienced in two countries with large populations (China and India), it is to be celebrated.”

Become a child sponsor to help keep children in school

Education is one of the most powerful tools we have to break the cycle of poverty. By keeping children in school, we empower the next generation with the knowledge and skills for a better livelihood.

Becoming a child sponsor is a meaningful way to help the next generation of children escape extreme poverty. Your sponsorship will help your sponsored child stay healthy, succeed in school and thrive in life.

Our child sponsorship program doesn’t end with your donation. We’ll update you about your child’s progress and we encourage you to write to them, so that they know you care about them.

Child sponsorship is a journey, and you can learn more about sponsoring a child through us here. Why sponsor a child? Because every child needs a childhood.

On 13 July 2013, 10 music students from the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music at the University of Melbourne shared their love of music in a concert dedicated to supporting children and families in Uganda.

Brought together by their passion for music, this group gathered regularly for dinners, concerts and any celebration with music from early 2012. As time passed they were inspired to do something more meaningful with their talents.

Together, they organised a concert with two main goals: to share their classical music talents with the wider community and help children in need. With 10 musicians in the group, they had a strong concert program with a mix of piano, violin and flute. They also had the range of skills needed to organise the show, with some of the musicians taking on additional roles like venue organiser, finance and marketing.

All the planning, organising and promotion paid off. On the night, more than 300 people attended the concert and over $1,000 was collected for programs supporting war-affected children and communities in Uganda.

Rebekah was one of the organisers and the master of ceremonies on the night. When we asked her about the key to her success in this event she said: “The advice we would give other people who are considering undertaking such a large fundraising event is the importance of role arrangements for people who are involved. Assigning roles such as administration, marketing, finance, concert program, stage management and performance means everything gets done and it gets done well. Also, it is necessary to have a leader among those people who conducts the progress of organising the event.”

ChildFund would like to send a special thanks to all involved, including performers Soojin An, Mary Hyunju Chun, Lucy Mikyung Ha, Jane Jiwon Lee, Jisook Noh, Laverne Eungyul Oh, Angela Jieun Park, Dana Park and Lina Heeseung Park; master of ceremonies Rebekah Chaerin Kim; and volunteer organiser Yesool Song.