Sponsor a child Now


You can sponsor a child for P600 per month or P7,200 per year by using the secure, online process. Child sponsorship can be paid monthly, quarterly or annually.

Sign up and sponsor a child now.


Know more about Child Sponsorship by jamcruz, Tue, 07/06/2010 - 10:16

Sponsorship is a way for you to make a real and life-changing difference for ONE precious boy or girl in need, along with his/ her family and community. Your regular sponsorship pledges - of P600 a month, or P20 a day (P7,200 annually) - will make sure those children are going to schools and are in good health.


That I may see, walk and go to school again by jamcruz, Tue, 07/06/2010 - 07:46

PICTURE OF LANDO

 

Lando, 14, loves going to school as much as playing "habulan" and baseball with friends. He used to help his mother sell “monay” on weekends to provide food for his 5 other siblings. 

But in June 2008, just a few days after he enrolled for 2nd year high school, Lando began feeling severe weakness and numbness all over his body. Soon, he was diagnosed with Guillain-Barre syndrome, a rare respiratory disorder which eventually paralyzed his whole body.

Sign up and sponsor a child now.


Now is the best time YOU sponsor a child. by admin, Thu, 07/01/2010 - 06:41

jon-jon-thumb

 

Jonjon, 6 years old, lives with his family in a small makeshift house at the side of a fly over road. Their house is a virtual junkshop, built from salvaged parts that his parents have scavenged along the busy streets of Malabon. Its walls are made

up of dilapidated plywood, floors from used tarpaulin. There’s a soiled mattress for a bed, an old distorted TV, and a stripped down and screeching electric fan. Jonjon’s parents get less than P150 from scavenging all day long.

Sign up and sponsor a child now.


Meet Jenny by Anonymous, Wed, 04/14/2010 - 07:10

meet jennyTwelve year old Jenny Lives in a very poor barangay in Northern Cebu. Her father is a seasonal farmer. Her mother works as a house helper in Cebu City leaving Jenny and other siblings with their father and grandmother.

As the eldest among four siblings, Jenny helps earn for the family by weaving abaca twines with her grandmother. For every 120-feet roll of abaca twine Jenny earns 4 pesos. Jenny can finish about 5 rolls a day for 20 pesos. With the high prices of food, Jenny’s daily effort is barely enough to buy a kilo of rice.

“Manginuha lang ko ron pag-ayo aron makaskwela ko. Ang akong pangandoy inig dako nako makatabang unta ko sa akong pamilya para dili na manabraho si nanay sa syudad,” ( I really hope I can go back to school this coming school year so I can finish my studies. I want to help my family so that mother won’t have to leave and work in the city) Jenny says.

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