2014

Your support changes lives!

Your support to help keep young students in school in China is an immeasurable gift, and an inspiration for these students who have already faced so many challenges in life from illness, loss of parents, physical disabilities, economic disadvantages, and more. Please consider sponsoring another student this year!

Below are excerpts from a letter that one student, Li, wrote to her sponsor.

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 I want to write you to express my thanks for giving me the opportunity to be so fortunate. Through all the teachers and students I have faced over this last year, your kindness has been an anchor to me, keeping me strong, and indeed, a major form of stability in my life. It makes me happy to know there is such love within and outside the family circle. I am extremely aware now that friends look after our needs so well and that perhaps there is a Being who knows that a supportive friend is needed to help through their troubled times.

Thank you my dear friend for all your prayers and for standing by me through everything. You can never know how grateful I am to you for bringing me a little sense and sanity into what was a very difficult period of my life. For your help, I am very happy, because it gave me a little light, and that light truly shines through you, and you have been such a great blessing to my life. From the bottom of my heart, I thank you for everything!

-Li

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CLEAN WATER :: Huang family

Mr. Huang is 61 years old and lives in rural Yunnan with his wife. Their 4-year-old granddaughter also lives with them as her mother has gone out to find work in the capital city of Kunming and is only able to come back to visit from time to time. Huang said this situation is quite normal in their village now; young people prefer to go out for migrant work because of the community’s lack of reliable water and income sources. The elders in the village need to take care of their grandchildren when their parents go out for work.

In past couple of years, Huang and his wife have had to carry water every day from the village’s only drinking water source, a ditch at the center of the village. The water flow was very low in the dry season, so they needed get up early in the morning to wait in line to collect water. This was their routine around 5 times each day. In the rainy season, the water they collected was muddy. This unsafe open water source exposed the Huang family and all of their neighbors to a greater risk of illness and disease.

Health training by Jenny Chu of CWEF
Health training by Jenny Chu of CWEF

Huang told us that their village committee has been applying to the local government to build a new drinking water system for a long time. They were so happy when they heard that CWEF would help their community build a drinking water system. The Huang family raised 400 RMB and contributed labor work for the project, which was completed in July 2014. Huang and his family have benefited significantly from the water project. They no longer need to get up early in the morning to wait in line to carry water, and they’ve saved a lot of time to focus on farm work. They have more time to rest, and now they can take a shower after finishing work every day, improving their hygiene and overall health. They plan to grow more vegetables and raise more livestock. They believe they will not only be able to save more money, but they will also be able to improve their granddaughter’s nutrition. As their financial situation gets better and better, they hope their daughter won’t need to go out for migrant work anymore, and their family can all live together again.

They didn’t know how to express their appreciation for CWEF’s help, but they promised to conserve water and try their best to protect the system. They hope everyone in the village can remember this gift they have received, and do more things to help others.

CLEAN WATER :: Huang family Read More »

REACHing towards graduation

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196 high school students in China learned about planning for the future and setting goals during the REACH activities at their school this year. After graduation, each student will pursue his or her own opportunities for the future. Powerful social networking tools, like QQ in China, help our CWEF team keep in touch with these women as they continue their education into university or find employment and start their family.

This year, CWEF invited seven previous graduates of the program to serve with us and with our program partners, including the American International School in Guangzhou (AISG), Target Foundation, and EMBER, as they give back to support the education of the next group of young women striving for the future. Summer, shown above, is a Year 1 university student studying towards a social work degree. She volunteered alongside AISG volunteers two times this year. Afterwards she told us, “As a girl who was helped by the CWEF programs, I always feel happy and satisfied taking part in the activities that are planned. I hope CWEF continues to develop in the future.”

We love to see the young people from the REACH program living out the value of community and collaboration in their lives, even after they have graduated from the program. Congratulations Summer, and congratulations to all of the students graduating this summer!

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Caring for Families

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The dislocation and disruption of families during the extreme programs of the Khmer Rouge almost 40 years ago continues to leave ripple effects in Cambodia. For many families, they lost elder family members who were the ones to equip the next generation with important skills in child care and development. The Khmer people care deeply for their precious children and young parents are eager for opportunities to learn how to plan for their families and care for their well-being, safety, and education. CWEF began offering a series of parenting sessions in communities around Cambodia in 2009.

Phai Lina, a participant in a recent parenting training session, shares her story:

“I am 29 years old. I am married with two children now. My family lives in Phnom Penh. My husband drives a tuktuk (motorcycle taxi) and I stay at home to care for our children. My parents are poor. They were not able to support me to go to school, so I quit school during grade 7. I did not stay in school long enough to gain education about preparing for my family. After I married my husband in 2006 we moved together to live with my mother-in-law.

I was really happy to join the CWEF training on parenting. The whole training helped me gain knowledge about how to care for children. I look forward to being a part of the next training session, too, because I gain the knowledge I need to raise healthy and good children. I am putting the lessons I learned into practice in my home, and I can already see good results. I am so thankful to CWEF for leading these trainings.

I also like to share with my neighbors and friends about the lessons I learned in these activities. When I have time to talk with someone that I know, I always share these lessons. It has become my habit to share this joy with other people I know. I want my children to grow up knowing these lessons so they can make good plans for their family in the future.”

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