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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.

During the summers of her childhood in Sydney, Carla remembers the children in her neighbourhood and at school having an abundance of strawberries to eat. At home, her mum would make sure she and her three older siblings would have at least a strawberry each so they wouldn’t feel left out.

“We lived in an affluent area so the other kids’ families could afford heaps of strawberries, whereas we couldn’t,” Carla says.

Her parents started a life in Australia with “little to nothing” after fleeing civil war in Lebanon in the 1980s, says Carla, who is now 28 years old. After finding temporary refuge in the United States, they eventually settled in Australia, where they worked long hours, and fought through language and cultural barriers, to raise Carla, her sister and her two brothers (pictured above).

“We didn’t have a lot of money,” Carla says. “When we were kids, there was a lot of things we could not afford. My parents always worked really hard to make sure we didn’t miss out, and it was always instilled in us to enjoy what we have.”

Carla says her parents and the challenges of her childhood taught her the values of respect, hard work, perseverance, and gratitude. Her parents took the opportunities they had living in Australia, and were determined to create a better life for themselves and their children.

Carla’s older siblings are now pursuing their dreams: her oldest brother works in law enforcement, her other brother is a graphic designer and runs his own business, and her sister is a nurse. The past several years Carla has worked in the events industry. “We didn’t come from a lot but, in our own right, we now play a big part in our society,” Carla says.

From ChildFund supporter to employee

Today, Carla is helping to give children in need the opportunities she and her family were lucky to have had.

She has been a child sponsor with ChildFund Australia over the past six years, helping children access essentials such as health care, education and protection. In 2021 she joined ChildFund’s supporter relations team in Sydney as an employee.

“Giving back is ingrained in me,” Carla says. “It’s something I’m passionate about, and it’s been enriched by my parents and what they’ve taught me.

Carla with a photo of her sponsored child. Carla sponsored children through ChildFund Australia for six years before joining the organisation as an employee in 2021. “Being involved with a charity and giving back has opened my eyes.”

“I am lucky to have been born and to live in Australia. I’ve been able to take the opportunities I’ve been given and experienced, and to grow a lot.

“Child sponsorship is my way of giving back and to help create opportunities for someone else.

“It doesn’t matter where you come from, if you have the opportunities and take them, then there is the ability to get to where you want to go.”

Carla hopes her sponsored child, eight-year-old Alviena, from the Philippines, grows up to be independent. “I hope she will be able to be educated, earn a living, start a family, and achieve whatever she puts her mind to.”

Supporting an international charity like ChildFund, and learning about the problems that many children living in poverty face, has helped broaden Carla’s views of the world and put issues, such as the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, into perspective.

“Being involved with a charity and giving back has opened my eyes,” Carla says. “We were worried about the number of COVID cases in Australia, but families overseas couldn’t even get vaccines or proper health care.

“If you’re in the position where you can give – even if it’s a tiny bit of money – why wouldn’t you? If the day comes when you need support, hopefully someone will do the same in return.”

For children born with disability in rural Cambodia, their parents often fear they will be left behind and try to conceal their child’s disability. Sokchea, 16, was born into a poor family in Battambang province. She was born with physical and intellectual disability.

“She had a poor memory,” said her mother, Vy, a widow with six children. “She would often lose her temper and act aggressively against me. She started school two years later than everyone else and I find it hard to be optimistic about her education.”

Sokchea’s physical disability made attending school difficult. “I was terrified when I first started school because people were afraid of me, and I was bullied. I didn’t want to go to school anymore,” she said.

ChildFund Cambodia is working with local organisations and authorities to help improve the lives of children with disabilities through the Disability Empowerment and Education Project (DEEP). The project seeks to empower children with disability to be confident in claiming their rights, particularly to an education. It also works with teachers, parents, local decision-makers so that children with a disability are prioritised in community plans.

“The project started in my school in 2020 and it helped change the way my teachers and parents saw children with disability. It taught them not to discriminate against them but to care for them. Parents were more comfortable bringing their children to school and we currently have 13 students with some form of disability enrolled here,” said Mr. Som, the principal at Sokchea’s school.  

“I told my students not to discriminate against those with disabilities,” said one teacher. “I strive to integrate students with and without disabilities, so that they can learn and play together.”

Because of the efforts from her teacher to create a friendly, safe classroom for Sokchea, she now has friends and enjoys school. “No one wanted to play with me or even sit with me before, but now I have a close pal. During recess, she always plays with me. I’m in such a good mood that I want to go to school every day,” she said.

Through the project Sokchea and other children with a disability can meet with local authorities and decision-makers to express the challenges that they face in the community and put forward solutions to these issues.

In the year since the project began, it has supported children with disability to attend school, gain the confidence to make their voices heard by decision-makers and support them to achieve their full potential in society.

Over the next three years the project will help 230 children with disability across two districts in the Battambang Province. ChildFund is working with two local organisations, Cambodian Disabled People Organization (CDPO) and Khmer NGO for Education (KHEN) to implement the project.

This project is funded by Barnfonden with support from Sida funds through ForumCiv.