Emily, a young teenager in rural Kenya, longed to go to school but her family was too poor to afford even the small cost of buying a school uniform – a requirement at Emily’s local school. Josephine, 14 years old, had to miss school every month for a different reason. Like many girls in her community, Josephine was forced to stay home during her monthly period because she had no access to sanitary protection. She missed an average of 46 days of school a year. Josephine and Emily are both girls whose lives have now been changed by Crossroads’ partner in Kenya, an NGO serving a community of about 250,000 people, where many live in poverty. In one of their programmes, they identify girl children who need help to attend and stay in school. They provided Emily with brand new school uniforms, so that she can now join her peers in class, and they helped Josephine and many more girls like her with a supply of sanitary pads so that now, she doesn’t need to stay home and miss lessons every month.

The work our partners do in their community is helping children break their family’s cycle of poverty, first by staying in school, then offering recreational and educational activities for youth, and then income generating schemes once they have finished school. Crossroads has shipped a variety of goods which will have life-changing implications!Kenya feedback - school3

Staff have begun the distribution of goods that will help them impact their community:
Books and computers from Crossroads will create the community’s first ever library. In a region of 250,000 and 36 schools, there is currently no library at all. Clothes and shoes will change the lives and health of many of the poorest children. “Many children wear tattered clothing,” staff told us, “and a majority of them go to school without shoes. The children have to walk barefoot into the pit-latrines, and this exposes them to the risk of contaminating diseases.” The staff have written to say the library is underway, in collaboration with the local government office.

Furniture from Crossroads will equip their youth centre, a place where young people from around the community come together to watch television, socialize and be encouraged by the staff. “The lack of enough furniture in our premises continues to hamper our opportunity to enrich and empower their lives,” they told us. Toys from the shipment will be used in a new centre soon to open for the community’s disabled children, as well as in the NGO’s regular community centre, where children can visit during weekends and after school.

It’s exciting to see the goods begin distribution and truly making a life changing impact for girls, like Emily and Josephine.

 

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Kenya Snapshot

Capital: Nairobi
Population: 45.55 million. About half of the population is under 18.

Population below international poverty line of US$1.25 per day: 44%

There are 1.6 million people living with HIV/AIDS ,  1 million children orphaned because of AIDS, and 2.6 million orphans in total.
More than a quarter of children are involved in child labour, mostly in agriculture, but also in the mining industry.

A61

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Mongolia is a pocket of the world easily forgotten. It’s rarely in the news. It’s not generally in our consciousness, other than picturing Genghis Khan in gorgeous costume riding across the vast steppes. In the 21st century, though, life on the ground can take pure grit. The average wage yields just on US$1 per day, and that’s if you can get employment.

Handicrafts - Adilbek leatherworkerFor Adilbek, it was virtually impossible to care for his family. After trying, and failing, to find regular work, he took a brave step. He decided to try and make a living out of the traditional Mongolian crafts he held very dear. He paid his way through evening classes to learn sewing and leatherwork skills until he was able to start making and selling leather products through Mary and Martha Mongolia (MMM), one of our Global Handicrafts suppliers.

Try as he might, though, Adilbek couldn’t work fast enough to be fully sustainable, working on his own by hand. We, happily, could help through our fair trade marketplace. As we sell Global Handicrafts, we can set aside a portion of the funds to help our craftsmen in what we call a ‘fair trade premium’. The Mary and Martha group used some of these to train Adilbek’s brother in leatherworking, so that he can work alongside and expand the business. They also used the funds to purchase a leather stamping machine (pictured at bottom) for quicker, more efficient production.

MGMM2133

With one in five people still living in poverty in Mongolia, it’s a joy to see the real fruit of fair trade in action through these social premium stories. We never tire of hearing them! You can buy some of the gorgeous leather products made by MMM craftspeople like Adilbek in our Global Handicrafts shop like journal covers and coasters.

 

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When Dorcas, of Zimbabwe, lost her job as a housemaid, she felt desperate. She had been forced to retire from the job, in the suburbs of the city, Mutare, because she was growing older, but as a widow with 9 children, and some grandchildren, Dorcas still needed to earn money for daily necessities. She had no prospects and no idea what to do.

photo4
It was 2008 in Zimbabwe when a group of grannies like Dorcas decided they weren’t going to be a statistic. These women, many of them widows, fought back against the catastrophic 94% unemployment rate with a weapon close to home: the knitting needle. They chose to knit because it requires no factory, no equipment and no infrastructure, and it can be done anywhere. Their name is as funky as their products: ‘Gogo Olive’. In the Shona language, ‘Gogo’ means a ‘granny’, or someone similarly beloved. ‘Olive’ connotes ‘hope’: a commodity in short supply among the struggling people of Zimbabwe.

We’ve worked with Gogo Olive for many years now, selling their knitted animals in our Global Handicrafts shop. We’ve seen them purchase eyeglasses for some of their workers, with the ‘fair trade premium’ earned from their Global Handicafts sales. Dorcas, from the story above (pictured below), now rejoices that she can be part of the collective. “Although it was difficult in the beginning to learn the knitting, I now manage well and do my best. I now have money to pay for my rent and buy food,” she says.

This year, we were excited to commission these same ‘gogo’s’ to knit the ornaments (above left) that hang on our 2015 Christmas carphoto1ds. We learnt that the benefit of extra income extended beyond their usual knitters. With such a large order, and running out of time, the group hit on the idea of employing women at their local prison to knit, for the same fair price, a number of the ornaments. They frequently visit women in prison and teach them skills that will help them find a safe and steady job when they are released. “When I was in the prison last week I was thinking how this will make Christmas a lot happier for these ladies and their families,” wrote our contact at Gogo Olive. “Even though it is a short contract they can earn quite a bit of money that they can use to buy things they need in prison or give to their families. Thank you for bringing them so much hope at Christmas time.”

We’re overjoyed to know that we could help some of the most disadvantaged women in Zimbabwe, through our Christmas cards!

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“In rural Zambia and Angola, everything people do requires bicycles,” said a Zambian consignee to us once, in despair, when asking us to include bikes in a shipment. For many rural people in poverty, a bike completely transforms their life, as they can travel to town to work or take their goods to a more profitable market.

How thankful we are, then, for our bicycle processing volunteers, who take donated bicycles, often sad, rusting, and missing parts, and bring them to a state of glory, each ready to transform a life far away! Recently, though, the bike department has been a little empty, seeking more bicycles to process but unsure how to source them. “We had desperately too few bikes for the approaching container shipments,” said Mario, the department manager, “and so we had to find a way of replenishing our stock.”

The answer came to Mario, a community volunteer, when he saw the racks of abandoned bicycles left at bus or ferry stations in Hong Kong, long forgotten by their owners. He arranged with one district to collect all the abandoned bikes in their area, and give them to us. The drive brought in an incredible 72 bicycles!

RS15118_Bicycle race

How you can help

At Crossroads, we love finding creative solutions to connect those in need with those who can help. Could you donate goods like bicycles? Click here to read more about donating goods.

Or if you would like to volunteer with our bicycle department, sign up here!

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One of our Global X-perience participants has become a strategic partner in helping Nepal’s earthquake victims re-start their lives.

When Pankaj from Nepal took part in our Struggle for Survival X-perience back in 2010, he wasn’t expecting to learn much. “I remember telling myself this is for people who have lived all their life in a developed country. As I had seen poverty every day, I assumed I could empathise. I could not have been more wrong.”

The x-perience began to impact Pankaj, when, along with the group, he took on the persona of a slum-dweller. He had no option but to force his ‘children’ to work, and was confronted with the decision to ‘sell’ those children to survive. By the end, his empathy had deepened and, he said, his priorities changed.

Pankaj has since returned to his home country of Nepal. “I understood poverty as a web that traps one,” he says. “So I co-founded a start-up NGO, the Institute for Suitable Action for Prosperity (ISAP), working to economically empower resource-poor people through entrepreneurship and a market based approach. We aim to provide stepping stones to help them climb out of poverty.”

Crossroads is not the only reason Pankaj begun his non-profit work, but he says it “did provide me the impetus to do more and guide me how I do work. Whenever I am designing programmes, I constantly relate to the poverty simulation and try to visualise how such a programme would help me if I was making paper bags for a living.”

When the first Nepal quake struck, Pankaj reached out to Crossroads for help. His NGO, ISAP, has been responding rapidly to the need in neighbouring villages in the Dhading district in NepalThanks to our donors, we have been able to assist ISAP with finances, which they have used to provide transitional shelters and relief materials along with assistance in the planned re-construction of homes better equipped to combat disasters.

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

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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...

read more ...

Hong Kong: Once in a Century Storm

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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The Philippines: Under the Shadow of a Volcano

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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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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...

read more ...

Hong Kong: Once in a Century Storm

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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The Philippines: Under the Shadow of a Volcano

Living beside an active volcano is not for the faint of heart. It's true that there are many advantages, if little...

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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.”

Give Now!

Donate to a shipment like this one.

DONATE MONEY

Donate Goods!

Want to donate goods for a shipment like this one?

DONATE GOODS

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

Cambodia: Bullet shells to Peace Doves

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...

read more ...

Hong Kong: Once in a Century Storm

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

read more ...

The Philippines: Under the Shadow of a Volcano

Living beside an active volcano is not for the faint of heart. It's true that there are many advantages, if little...

read more ...