Christine, a 49 year-old widow, lives in a grass thatched house with her 8 grandchildren whose parents died from HIV/AIDS. She had very limited household resources – just one saucepan, two plates, no bed and no mosquito net. Her grandchildren were not going to school because they didn’t have the school supplies and clothes they needed. Finding enough food to feed all nine of them has been a huge struggle for Christine, and the children regularly suffer from bouts of malaria. They were often bored and restless.

“I thought I had been forgotten” – Widowed grandmother of 8

Uganda elderlyLife changed for Christine and the 8 little ones when a shipment arrived from Crossroads, filled with goods donated from Hong Kong. Our partners in Uganda came into contact with Christine and her family and were able to give her some of the very things she needed most: mosquito nets, new plates, cups and cooking utensils, toys, clothes and games for the children and, most importantly, uniforms and stationery so that they can return to school.

“I thought I had been forgotten,” Christine exclaimed when she received the goods. Staff told us that she hugged everybody and danced around with joy!

Uganda schoolIt wasn’t only impoverished families like Christine’s that benefited from the shipment. Goods from this container were used to invest in community schools and health centres. At one clinic, some patients were sleeping on the floor because the number of beds was insufficient. Now, beds from Crossroads mean that more patients can be treated and served in comfort and safety.

In one rural secondary school (right), students sat on the floor for lessons because they didn’t have desks and chairs. Uganda school chairsSchool furniture from Crossroads’ shipment means that now, not only can they sit at desks and chairs each day for more effective learning and concentration, but the school has been upgraded to an exam facility! This means children no longer have to travel to a different village for exams but can sit them at their own school.

It’s truly been a story of transformation for this Ugandan community, and one for which we’re so very grateful to our donors and sponsors!

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Uganda Snapshot

Population: 37.58 million
Capital: Kampala

Uganda is a fertile, land-locked country in East Africa, in the Africa Great Lakes region, with a tropical climate.

Great progress has been made in fighting HIV in Uganda, but 1.5 million people still live with the disease, and there are 1 million children orphaned by HIV/AIDS.

39% of girls are married by the age of 18. 37.7% of people in Uganda live below the international poverty line of US$1.25/day.

A6

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“These children will never have had a present all of their own without any sexual favours being demanded of them.”

(Stock image)

(Stock image)

There’s a reason we can’t share the faces of our most recent recipients in Cambodia. These are girls in a ‘safe house’, where many were once sold into prostitution and have escaped or been rescued from slavery. Others have been gang raped and needed somewhere safe to start again.
Now living together in a safe compound, some can hardly remember a time when they weren’t owned and abused by someone else. “The centres have girls as young as 4,” wrote Stella, a visiting teacher delivering goods on behalf of Crossroads Foundation.

Over recent years, we have sent carryout goods like educational equipment to this sparsely resourced Cambodian centre, as staff seek to love, support, rehabilitate and train the girls for a brand new life. We thought of them when we had a recent offer from a Hong Kong freight forwarding company: a container of beautiful new fluffy seal toys, unable to make it to their destination in time for the holidays. At first we were unsure of how we would find homes for these 45,000 now orphaned seals but once we put the offer to our partners, we were overwhelmed with interest from over thirty two NGOs wanting to accept some!

“It broke my heart to see how very, very happy and excited they were to receive a seal,” wrote Stella, after distributing them amongst their rescued women. “Some of them carried their seal around with them for the rest of the day, eating their meals with their seal on their lap, dancing and holding their seal….”

We sent 500 seals for distribution among other children at risk of sex trafficking in Cambodia and will be sending a further 2,500, later this year. Many more of them were given out to groups in Hong Kong working with people in need. We saw them distributed in elderly homes, women’s shelters, a soccer club for disadvantaged young people, children in foster homes and kindergartens and others in low income areas.

One shelter for domestic helpers in crisis wrote, “Our job is not just to provide them with physical shelter and food, our job is to make them feel loved and cared for too. Receiving a cuddly toy like this demonstrates that there are people out there remembering them and wanting them to feel happy – the seal is thus a symbol of empathy and concern (as well as looking quite cute!!).”

Wherever they ‘swam’, the little seals brought happy, smiling faces and so much joy and thankfulness. They’ve reminded us once again that even the smallest gift can bring a powerful message of love and care.

 

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Donate to a shipment like this one.

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Donate Goods!

Want to donate goods for a shipment like this one?

DONATE GOODS

Hope after incarceration: Zambia

“I was doing Grade 7 when my father was sentenced to life imprisonment,” recounts Bodiao. “Life came to a standstill as...

read more ...

Liberia: Youth empowerment

WHO IS THIS SHIPMENT HELPING? Liberia as a nation is still suffering deep social and economic wounds from a civil war that ended...

read more ...

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Shipment Feedback: The conflict in Syria continues to devastate lives and communities, with thousands of people still displaced and living in flimsy...

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WHO IS THIS SHIPMENT HELPING? When we first started working with our Cameroonian partners in 2010, they were planning and working on...

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‘Ming’ is a teenaged boy like so many in Hong Kong. He studies hard and is pressured by his parents, as well as himself. Trying to escape the stress, he begins drinking in Wan Chai bars and meeting girls, but it’s one fateful one-night stand that potentially changes Ming’s life forever. That night passes in a blur, and is quickly forgotten by Ming until, some years later, his new girlfriend, this time a serious relationship, becomes pregnant, and then very sick. At first, the young couple thinks it’s the pregnancy making her sick, but soon a blood test reveals the horrifying truth: Ming’s girlfriend is HIV positive. The revelation forces Ming to confess his one-night-stand and to ask himself, could really be possible that he contracted the disease from her and infected his girlfriend, not to mention their baby?

Ming’s story is fiction. His is one of four life stories told in Crossroads’ HIV/Aids experience. However, the essence of his story is absolutely real for many in Hong Kong. The latest government report states that in Hong Kong, around 7000 people are HIV positive, and 1500 are living with Aids. In 2014 alone, 600 new people contracted HIV and more than 100 developed Aids. HIV/Aids cases in Hong Kong are rising.

Recently, the statistics were brought to life for a group of employees from Gilead, a pharmaceutical company, when staff took part in Crossrodas’ Aids X-perience. Gilead provides HIV medications to around 7 million people around the world, often at low cost but for some of the staff, hearing stories like Ming’s brought a new perspective to their work. “I was surprised it actually doesn’t matter from which country you are,” commented Inverleith, of Gilead. “I was really impressed by Ming’s story. He was so young and unaware. Overall I think there are so many circumstances in which you can get HIV and have no control over it.”

Sherry, another Gilead staff member, was also struck by seeing the illness from another side. “It was great,” she said. “I really liked the setup of the rooms where you could see and listen to the different stories about HIV/Aids. It covers everything. It doesn’t matter if you are a boy, a mother, a father, or a girl who is a prostitute. After seeing and listening to some of their stories I felt sad and sorry for them.”

For many of our Aids X-perience participants, going through the simulation raises questions as to what they can do about the problem. However, for Sherry the answer was clear. “The experience makes me even more proud about my job. It’s great to have a job that enables me to help people who are having HIV. Watching and listing to these personal stories encourages me only more. I’m only working a year for Gilead now and before I started working, I thought HIV was just a scary disease. But I now I know it`s something that can happen to any person.”

Inverleith felt even more proud of her job by going through the experience. “So far there are only medicines that can suppress HIV, not cure it. Seeing these stories makes it only more clear to me that it’s very important to improve HIV/Aids medicines even further to save the lives of even more people.”

Hope after incarceration: Zambia

“I was doing Grade 7 when my father was sentenced to life imprisonment,” recounts Bodiao. “Life came to a standstill as...

read more ...

Liberia: Youth empowerment

WHO IS THIS SHIPMENT HELPING? Liberia as a nation is still suffering deep social and economic wounds from a civil war that ended...

read more ...

Syria: Aid and empowerment for refugees

Shipment Feedback: The conflict in Syria continues to devastate lives and communities, with thousands of people still displaced and living in flimsy...

read more ...

Cameroon: Educating and rebuilding

WHO IS THIS SHIPMENT HELPING? When we first started working with our Cameroonian partners in 2010, they were planning and working on...

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Orphans and abandoned children

In Moldova, Europe’s poorest nation, unemployment and economic problems have led to widespread poverty and low living standards. Some parents send their children to orphanages because they do not have the income to look after them, while others travel to Russia or Western Europe seeking higher paying jobs. This means there are now at least

7,000 children in institutions in Moldova, but only 2% are actual orphans.

Our consignee is seeking to improve the lives of these children by placing them in safe environments where they can grow in maturity and self-reliance. The organisation works alongside orphanages and outreach centres, identifying homeless children and placing them with foster families where they receive the care and attention they deserve. They also provide jobs locally to help with the problem of unemployment, particularly amongst ex-orphanage young people, and to help young women avoid the dangers of being trafficked into the sex trade.

Potential impact:

  • The chance for many more children to have foster parents
  • Clothing and essentials for hundreds in the local community

Shipment includes:

  • Clothing and household goods for local communities
  • Educational supplies for orphanages and local schools.

 

Moldovan Children2Tanya has a smile on her face nowadays, and her future looks bright. She was fostered by a teacher in the local school at the age of 12, and is now an articulate and well cared for teenager. It could have been so different. Her alcoholic mother left home to live with her boyfriend, leaving Tanya (12) and her brother (13) utterly alone, living in poverty in a village in Transnistria. In winter, it was so cold that they would stay in bed together all day, just to keep warm. After her brother was hit by a car and killed, Tanya was left devastated in a filthy home with no running water or heating. Her life was literally saved by her foster mother, despite the family’s own poverty. The NGO organised volunteers to extend the family home, and they provided hygiene items, clothing, and extra necessities to the family to help with the burden of a new child. Sadly, there are many other disadvantaged children like Tanya, and shipments to Moldova provide goods which are a lifeline to foster families.

 

Moldovan ChildrenFor many children, life in an orphanage is better than life with abusive or neglectful parents. Care from foster parents is even better. Shipments like this one, with household goods and school supplies support these children and foster families.

 

 

 


 

Children in foster families and orphanages received shoes, clothing, stationery and toys from Crossroads’ previous shipment.

Children in foster families and orphanages received shoes, clothing, stationery and toys from Crossroads’ previous shipment.

Some of Transnistria’s poorest live in rundown dwellings like this. Our partners found children living alone in broken houses, suffering particularly through cold winters.

Some of Transnistria’s poorest live in rundown dwellings like this. Our partners found children living alone in broken houses, suffering particularly through cold winters.

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Donate to this shipment now!  In the ‘what for’ box, write ‘Moldova S1932D.’

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Moldova Snapshot

Moldova Population: 3.55 million

Capital: Chișinău

Moldova is the poorest nation in Europe. There are currently 7,000 children in staterun institutions but only 2% are orphans (BBC). Moldova is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe, formerly part of the Soviet Union. Our partner project is actually based in Transnistria, a breakaway state, autonomous but with limited international recognition. It has a population of 505 thousand, and its capital is Tiraspol.Of children who pass through orphanages in Moldova, one in 10 commits suicide and one in 5 become involved in crime

Moldova map