Poverty Eradication

The landscape of global poverty ( how did we get here). You can find children suffering from poverty in every corner of the world. As wide spread as the problem, so are the reasons that each population finds themselves struggling. In some cases, it’s the harsh conditions that leads to a lack of employment and malnutrition, while in others, its years of gang violence and exposure to drugs that drive entire communities into addiction and despair.

The Wrong Kind Of Impact

Negative early experiences like exposure to drugs, malnutrition and even lack of parental support can influence a child ability to cope with stress, affect their health and leave them falling behind in school. Poverty causes children to react to their environment instead of planning for a brighter future. They wonder where they will  get their next meal or how they can  help their family. This kind of challenges trap children into a cycle of poverty that can last for generations.

Children Can Break The Cycle

We believe children and youth are the key to creating lasting change in the communities we serve. That’s why we focus our programs and efforts on children between the ages 3-24 years and their families. With your help, a sponsored child has access to life changing.

Education programs, health care and dental benefits, life skills training, jobs skill workshops, community centers and more.

How To Break The Cycle Of Poverty

We believe ending poverty starts with children, through our education and health programs, life skills and empowerment workshops, children are given the opportunity to envision a future they have never seen before. They are given the chance to put an end to the generational poverty that burdened those before them and truly break the cycle of poverty for themselves and their communities.

The Cycle Of Poverty

Children born into poverty

Early childhood illness & malnutrition

Limited job skills – unemployment

Lack of education and resources

Children born into poverty
Early childhood illness & malnutrition
Lack of education and resources
Limited job skills – unemployment
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