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BECOME A CHILD SPONSOR TODAY AND CHANGE A CHILD'S LIFE
ICT currently has many children in desperate need of sponsorship in Kenya, Sri Lanka, India and Cambodia.
These are particularly vulnerable children who need urgent assistance. From shelter, to education and basic health care, to skills training these children currently have nothing. But your decision to sponsor a child can definitely change that!
YOU can make the difference.
If you don’t have time to volunteer or cannot afford big donations but would just like to make a difference, child sponsorship is one of the easiest most effective ways to do so! You just set up a monthly standing order of £20 (that’s just 65p a day) and help a child receive an education, or have a safe place to
sleep at night, or even have a healthy meal! Sponsoring a child also allows you to see the big difference you make in a child’s life!
Our child sponsorship scheme is unique in that your donation will go directly to the partner organisation where you sponsor your child and towards improving the life of your sponsored child.
By becoming a Child Sponsor today, YOU can ensure that one less child has to suffer.
Sponsor a Child Today (online) >>
Sponsor a Child Today (PDF) >> |
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Iresha
is 4 years old. Her mother was killed by the tsunami in Sri Lanka on 26th December 2005. Although her father survived, he is on a very low income and struggles to care for Iresha, her sister and 2 brothers...
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Rushi
is 4 years old and attends the ICT-supported crèche in India. His entire family live in a single room. His father is an agricultural labourer earning very little money...
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| Sasani Purnima, the youngest of three children, joined Shilpa after the Tsunami of December 2004. She lost her father in the Tsunami and her mother spent months in hospital for lung infections, from which she still suffers today. Sasani only managed to save herself by hanging onto a rock... read more |
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| Dayani Wasantha lost her mother during the Tsunami, so her father was left to take care of her and her 2 siblings. This task proved hard for her father who eventually stopped going to work. Dayani and her family were left in utter poverty... read more |
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