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The tangerine is a signature fruit in Bac Kan province in northeast Vietnam.

Its sweet and slightly tangy taste is loved by many in the region, and during Tet – or the Vietnamese new year – in February, the bright yellow and green fruit adorns altars in homes, along with bananas, grapefruits and oranges, as an offering to ancestors.

For 22-year-old farmer Viet (pictured above with his wife), however, tangerines are so much more. They’re his livelihood, and they represent the pinnacle of the long road he’s taken to get to where he is now.

Growing up in a family of farmers, his parents worked long hours growing rice and fruit trees to put food on the table. There was rarely any money for anything else and it was a struggle to keep Viet and his younger brother in school.

His parents had dropped out of school early to work on the farm, and it seemed likely Viet would do the same.

But in 2006 – two years after ChildFund Australia began working in Don Phong commune in Bac Kan province – Viet was sponsored by James, an Australian in Sydney.

It was a life-changing moment for Viet, and over time the financial pressures of farm life eased for his parents and Viet, aged 11 at the time, was able to continue his studies.

He went from having few resources and clothes, to owning new shirts, a warm winter coat, and new books, uniforms and writing materials for school.

His commune, home to more than 2,000 people, also underwent dramatic changes as a result of ChildFund’s sponsorship program: a health centre and a school were built; sanitation facilities were implemented in homes; child rights and protection activities were introduced; and families were taught financial and modern agricultural techniques to help improve their day-to-day livelihoods.

There’s a traditional saying in Myanmar that goes “treat your husband as a God and treat your son as a boss”.

Win May Htway knows it well. As a young girl in Myanmar, this phrase summed up what was expected of her and how she should act.

Win May, however, had different plans.

“I have always seen myself as a person not guided much by traditional norms,” she says.

Win May has made a career out of defying the expectations in a country that has tried to put limits on what she should hope to achieve.

She is one of three local women who have risen to the role of Country Director in the six national offices that ChildFund Australia manages.

Inspired by the line “the child is father of the man” from a William Wordsworth poem she read in school, Win May has dedicated her life to promoting equality and opportunities in Myanmar.

“The social and cultural norms that affect girls still persist in our society, she says. “Gender should not be a barrier for girls to have the same opportunities as boys to develop to full potential,” she says.

“Not just in Myanmar but everywhere; every child and youth must have the same rights and opportunities to grow to their potential because everyone is a human being, a person, regardless of their gender.”