Every year, Crossroads sends out many shipments of goods to people who are suffering. We also distribute a large quantity of donated goods to people right here in Hong Kong who need help. Whether overseas or local, people in poverty often lack the most basic necessities, from daily needs such as cutlery and bed sheets, to things that an office or school needs to function, like stationery or computer equipment. Run a campaign with your family and friends to collect goods that will help a world in need!

Why: With many months of sweltering heat, the Hong Kong climate can be more than uncomfortable. Fortunately, for most of us we can find respite with air conditioning units in both our offices and at home. It is a luxury we can take for granted, as for those struggling in Hong Kong, some people cannot afford even a basic fan. The gift of a fan will provide much needed relief in the summer heat!

Who: These fans will serve people within Hong Kong.

The fans will go to:

  • individuals/families. People are referred to us daily by the Social Welfare Department of the HKSAR, as well as by charities.
  • non-profit organisations registered in the HKSAR.

What: Free-standing fans in good condition.

How: Collect fans from friends, family and people you know. When you are ready to deliver the fans, please contact our Incoming Goods Department to arrange a donation. Tel: 2272 9345 or email donategoods@crossroads.org.hk

Cost: Alternatively, you can also donate $400 and we will purchase one on your behalf.

Got a question? Email us at communications@crossroads.org.hk for more info.

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The seven single mothers were waiting in a social service centre in Shatin when Crossroads staff visited to follow up on the furniture and electrical appliances they had received from our warehouse. Living on social welfare benefits, and with children to care for, these seven women don’t have an easy life, but when we met them, they were laughing and smiling, and eager to talk.

They spoke of how they have banded together, over the past eight years, to support one another, share with each other and encourage each other. Middle aged, with varied levels of education and training, some of them have found it difficult to find part time jobs that would allow them to earn enough to support their families without assistance, so they rely on social welfare payments to survive.

Instead of staying at home, though, and dwelling on their difficulties, the women decided they wanted to look outwards, at what they could do for the community. They regularly support a group of blind people, who live in even more difficult circumstances than themselves, and take them on outings giving friendship and support and helping how they can.

It was a joy to be able to support these women, who have such huge hearts for those around them, with some of the goods they needed for their own homes: computers, rice cookers, microwaves, towels, clothes and more. One woman was excited to now own a reading light, being able to read books in the evening without disturbing the family.  Others were happy to receive a microwave, so they can prepare food quickly and save time to work or to take care of their children.

We’re inspired to see people in such difficult circumstances turn to support each other and their neighbours in need, even with what little they have.  “Truly, these wonderful women in Shatin deserve praise,” said a Crossroads staff member who met them. “Thank you, ladies, for being seven silent heroes who are helping a world in need!”

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It is almost ten on a quiet Wednesday morning in the children’s playroom at a non-profit Shatin play centre. Fifty parents are gathered, waiting in a circle, holding their children closely to their sides. A moment later their leader Esther steps inside the circle, and begins a magical, joyful couple of hours for both children and their parents. The children are from grassroots families in the surrounding community, but the  toys and equipment dotted around the room traveled just a little further: they were chosen for the playgroup from Crossroads’ own warehouse in Tuen Mun.

Three times a week, Esther leads a playtime that children and their parents can attend together.  It’s an environment far removed from the strict structure and expectations faced by so many children in Hong Kong kindergartens and preschools. This playgroup’s vision is different, and Esther explains what makes it so special. “In Hong Kong, parents are crazy to get an opportunity to play with their children. In our playroom we provide space for them to have ‘messy play’ together and we also teach them parenting skills.” It was a joy for Crossroads to provide much of the play equipment and supplies that the playgroup uses to help local families.

For Esther, raised in Hong Kong herself, unlearning some of her own traditional ways of raising and teaching kids was significant. “My eyes were opened when I attended a conference where I heard about all the benefits for children to be able to play, get dirty and be stimulated to be creative, independent and responsible for themselves.”

Charles is one of the smiling parents enjoying today’s play session. With his wife, they visit regularly to have some quality time with their son Morris. Smiling from ear to ear, it’s obvious that it’s not just Morris who’s having a great time. “I think this place is great,” Charles says. “We live in Tai Wai in a standard apartment. For Morris unfortunately there is very little room to play. When he was a baby that wasn’t a problem, but now he’s started to walk and really needs more space. It’s great he can come here to play and to make new friends. Every time he comes here he gets a great smile on his face and gets really excited. Unfortunately I never had a chance to play like this as a child. It’s great he is having it here.”

In a city where space is at a premium, it’s a joy to help create a space where children can be children!

 

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In Abel’s first year in a Romanian orphanage, the little boy cried often. Romania’s child protection services had removed Abel from his home after his father died. As a shepherd working in the countryside, his father had been absent most of the time. When he did come home, his alcoholic rages were so terrifying that Abel would run away to a neighbour’s house until he had left once again. His mother, also an alcoholic, was deemed unfit to care for him.

Although he had been neglected and abused, 8-year-old Abel missed his home. The loving staff at his orphanage didn’t blame Abel when he behaved badly that first year. “‘It’s really difficult for a child to get out of a family and suddenly end up in a place where they know nobody,” said Gabi, one of the orphanage carers. “It’s a traumatising event in itself for an 8 year old child to be placed in an orphanage. We try to talk with them as much as possible and to show as much love as we can.”

Abel is one of 98 children who have been given a second chance at life by this orphanage, who has requested a shipment from Crossroads to support their work. Despite living in an orphanage, most of the children have one or both parents still living, but for various reasons they weren’t able to care for them. “Where possible we try to stay in touch with their families, so they can visit the orphanage,” said Gabi, who acts as mentor to the children. “Sometimes this works out really well, so the children can go back to their families. But most of the time, the parents are facing such big problems it just doesn’t work. In that case they will stay with us. They will make new friends, go to school and they will be capable of starting their own life, hopefully without getting into the same problems their parents had. If that happens, I’m really satisfied and feel proud that I have been able to guide a child, from a hopeless and miserable position, into an adult who is feeling self-confident enough to decide about his own life.”

This summer, Crossroads staff visited the orphanage to hear their needs and meet the staff and children. They saw children who looked like regular, happy kids from the outside, but with a deep longing behind their eyes, revealing heartbreaking emotional needs. Some children were wearing shoes with holes, and we heard of bunk beds so old they collapsed underneath the children. While built on a solid foundation of love, dignity and care, the orphanage can’t afford to buy new things for the children regularly. They submitted a wish list to Crossroads of things like clothes, shoes, beds and other goods that will help them give these 98 children the kind of attention, care and love that they so deserve.

Our staff spoke with the children about the goods that would soon come their way. “It’s a container of love,” said Crossroads’ representative Joel, “filled by people who do care for you. Even if they are on the other side of the world.”

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Romania Snapshot

Population: 21.77 million
Capital: Bucharest

Population below national poverty line of US$3.50 per day: 21.5%

Infant mortality rates are among the highest in Europe. Access to health care is not commonly available for the poor.

Based on GDP stats, Romania is the 9th poorest country in Europe out of 50, with an average income of USD 12.80 per person.

A74

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It’s 4 AM in Surif, Palestine and although it’s still dark outside, Zeina is getting out of bed to start the day. As a woman in a region fraught with fear, unemployment and the constant fear of conflict, Zeina doesn’t find life easy. She shoulders the responsibility of raising a family and managing a household with very little money. Soon after breakfast, Zeina visits her elderly mother who at 88 is frail and in need of daily care. With no insurance or affordable medical treatment, Zeina looks after her mother and makes sure she has what she needs.

On bad days, when her mother is sick, Zeina can’t go to work. Today, though, she’s well enough to let Zeina go to her office. Here, Zeina oversees a small cooperative of women who make traditional Palestinian embroidery. A single hand-embroidered scarf can take over 100 hours of work and because the women are busy managing households, they’ll often take home their work and return the piece, finished and ready for sale.

The cooperative is a lifeline for these women, at a time when so many Palestinian men are unemployed – the Gaza strip has one of the world’s highest unemployment rates. Women’s work like sewing, that was once seen as a sideline job adding to the husband’s income, has become a vital living wage for the families of the craftswomen. Zeina loves her job. To her, it means earning an income to support her family, while continuing the beautiful traditions of her ancestors generations before her. For many of her coworkers, the money earned from embroidery is the sole source of family income.

Created behind the barbed wire and walls surrounding Palestine, the embroidered handicrafts of Zeina and her coworkers would have little chance of being sold or seen in the world outside, were it not for Sunbula. Sunbula is a fair trade organisation that buys goods from small groups like Zeina’s cooperative, and sells them to retailers in nearby Jerusalem and throughout the world, including our own Global Handicrafts shop. We sell pencil cases, soap and jewellery made by these and other Palestinian artisans.

Zeina doesn’t know much about Hong Kong, or the people who might buy her cooperative’s beautifully embroidered products. Yet, she enjoys the extra income that they generate and the freedom that comes from being fairly paid for a job well done. In a land where uncertainty reigns, Zeina cherishes that all the more closely.

Shop for Sunbula products at Global Handicrafts here.

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It’s a large courtyard, filled with people, like any other marketplace you might find in towns across the world. Colourful flags are strung around, and little stalls hold boxes of clothing and household goods. Yet, stepping into this marketplace in Haifa, Israel, it’s suddenly clear that this one is special.

In the left corner is a stand with a woman busy writing down names and contact details of half a dozen other people standing around her. There’s a positive atmosphere in the courtyard. In the back is a huge pile of furniture, all from Crossroads, all waiting for new homes. Looking around at the people browsing the goods, it’s suddenly clear what makes this ‘marketplace’ different: no money is changing hands. The ‘customers’ looking at the goods are refugees and others in need who have found themselves in desperate circumstances in Israel.

Between 1989 and 2006, almost a million people emigrated from the former Soviet Union to Israel, escaping violent conflicts and collapsed economies. For a nation with only 4.5 million at that time, it was a huge influx of people. In recent decades, Crossroads has helped supply NGOs like the one running  this  distribution ‘marketplace’ in Haifa. We’ve shipped more than 20 containers of goods to support refugees and new immigrants start life afresh in a place of safety.

Most recently, 2014 saw a new wave of immigrants from the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, many of whom have sought help from this distribution centre. “I had families here, the last year, who came with war visible in their eyes,” said Victor, the centre’s director, who was a refugee himself from the former Soviet Union. “They didn’t have food, they didn’t have a house to stay in. They had absolutely no idea where to go. They didn’t even have official status in Israel because that takes some time. In the meantime, they were just wandering through the streets – mothers, fathers and children, all together. They don’t speak the language and they don’t know Israeli culture, so these people need a lot of help getting through these first weeks here.”

The government helps these new arrivals with accommodation, but often the homes are bare. Furniture from Crossroads, given out through this distribution centre, has helped many such refugees move from having nothing, sleeping on the floor, to having a real home for their family.

“It happens all the time that they come to me and ask why we are helping them and why we are being so nice,” reflects Victor. “I always explain that I was not different than they were, and have been going through the same process as they are now. It’s my vision to offer them the same chance as I had: to start a new future here. Not in war, but in peace.”

Outside, in the marketplace, an elderly lady is leaving with some pieces of clothing and a smile on her face. No strings attached and no bill to pay. This is not a place to pay money for clothes, but a place to receive love and the chance to start a new life.

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The city of Bethlehem has attracted tourists seeking peace and meaning for centuries, and for local Bethlehem residents, this stream of tourists is an economic lifeline. In a region where jobs are so scarce, many small handicrafts shops have appeared, where Bethlehem craftsmen can earn an income selling olive wood carvings that symbolise the memory of Bethlehem for visitors.

There’s a darker side to Bethlehem’s woodcarving industry, though. Olive wood artisans often work in small spaces where generations of fine sawdust is thick on the walls, the floor, the roof and even in the garden outside. It takes a serious toll on the health of these craftspeople who often work with wood throughout their entire lives. They can develop coughs and respiratory problems, and even cancer.

For many of these artisans, this is just the way life goes. Their parents before them had worked in the same conditions, just like their grandparents and the generations before them.

One woman, Basma, saw the unsafe conditions faced by Bethlehem’s woodworkers and was determined to make a change. Heading up local enterprise Holy Land Handicrafts – whose wood carvings we sell in our own Global Handicrafts shop – she started making workplaces safer for the 35 workshops in the cooperative. At first, she met resistance. “Why change things from the way our ancestors have done things for generations?” the olive wood families asked her. With education and advocacy, though, Basma started to see people’s attitudes shift, and she finally found one woodworker named Raja, who agreed to let her help him adapt his workshop to make it safer and in line with fair trade principles.

An engineering team worked on Raja’s workshop for months. They re-painted the walls, cleaned out generations of wood dust, and most importantly, installed an extractor device that sucks up wood dust and coating fumes, removing them safely from the workspace. Raja coats his  wood carvings in lacquer to preserve them. Inhaling the fumes for many years had damaged Raja’s health.

“Before, I was coughing all the time when I put lacquer on the carvings,” he explains. “But since I’ve been using the extraction hood, I noticed that I’ve stopped coughing. I can breathe better and my health has improved. It really changed my life.”

In such a small community, it doesn’t take long for stories to spread. The fact that Raja had suddenly stopped coughing reached the ears of other artisans and their wives. Soon, dozens of other woodworking families were begging Holy Land Handicrafts to renovate their own shops too. Thus far, 9 shops have been renovated and many more are on the waiting list! It’s literally changing the health and lives of Bethlehem’s artisans. For their wives too, it’s a relief to know that their own sons, who intend to follow in their fathers’ footsteps, might escape the health problems that have plagued generations of local woodworkers. “Before the renovation, I wouldn’t allow my son to work in this business,” said one mother. “There was so much noise and dust everywhere. It just wasn’t safe and I didn’t want to expose my child to this, even if he wanted it himself. But because of the renovation, I’m now happy for my son to follow his father.”

Olive wood carvings from Holy Land Handicrafts are popular sellers in the Global Handicrafts shop, especially at Christmas time. Now we, and our customers, can breathe a little easier, knowing that the artisans can, too! It’s a joy to know that fair trade truly is changing, and saving lives.

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In our line of work, envy can take strange forms. It’s not that we aspire to plush offices or elegant homes, but we can become quite envious when we see commercial warehouse equipment which lightens the load of our volunteers. Until recently, they loaded tons of cargo into containers using sheer determination and massive perspiration. Swire, however, has helped.

One of its companies, HAECO, specialises in aircraft repair and maintenance services at Hong Kong’s International Airport. Some of their work processes are not unlike our own so, when we considered fundraising to buy more supportive equipment, we consulted HAECO for their recommendation. As it happened, the man we spoke to had been to Crossroads and undertaken our poverty x-periential programme. “Take what you like!” he told our team, as he showed them a collection of equipment the airport no longer needed.

And the story got better. Some adjustments were needed for our use and these might have proved expensive. One of our volunteers, however, is a professional with the needed expertise and devoted his spare time over several weeks to fit it precisely to purpose.

As we say, it’s a strange kind of envy we harbour here. Sometimes the business community helps us with a straight up financial gift, and that is always welcome. Sometimes, they help with the provision of the needed expertise or equipment, and that can also be transforming. We are constantly looking for commercial partnerships, large and small, that can build capacity and empower us further on behalf of the powerless.small, that can build capacity and empower us further on behalf of the powerless.

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Living in a city where 13,800 tonnes of waste are sent to landfill daily, we were excited to receive a donated solution for managing Crossroads’ own waste. Every day, as we receive donations, we handle cardboard, metal and plastics: all an abundant by-product of goods donations. With the compacting machine (above), donated by Ladies’ Circle Hong Kong, our environmental staff can compress all of this waste to a tiny 1/4 of their original volume. That means we can load four times as much waste onto a truck for recycling, giving four times the new life and purpose to something that could have been filling dump sites.four times the new life and purpose to something that could have been filling dump sites.

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Decades ago, bombshells ripped through Cambodia, scarring the land and its people. Young Heang was a little toddler when his family...

read more ...

Ukraine: losing everything

“Everything broke in my head, soul and body. You are alive but you don’t feel alive.”  A Ukrainian military leader spoke...

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The furious downpour was the longest recorded in Hong Kong's history, leading to severe flooding and massive damage.  Affected families were...

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