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How to sponsor a child in the developing world
Compare child sponsorship through SOS Children's Villages
Sponsor a child in Africa
Sponsor a child in Asia
Sponsor a child in South America
Sponsor a child in Afghanistan
Sponsor a child in Bangladesh
Sponsor a child in Bolivia
Sponsor a child in Brazil
Sponsor a child in Burkina Faso
Sponsor a child in Burundi
Sponsor a child in Cambodia
Sponsor a child in China
Sponsor a child in DRC
Sponsor a child in Ecuador
Sponsor a child in Ethiopia
Sponsor a child in Ethiopia with Action Aid
Sponsor a child in Ghana (World Vision)
Sponsor a child in Gambia
Sponsor a child in Ghana (Action Aid)
Sponsor a child in Guatemala
Sponsor a child in Haiti
Sponsor a child in Kenya
Sponsor a child in Kenya (Action Aid)
Sponsor a child in Liberia
Sponsor a child in Malawi (World Vision)
Sponsor a child in Malawi (Action Aid)
Sponsor a child in Mozambique (World Vision)
Sponsor a child in Mozambique (Action Aid)
Sponsor a child in Nepal
Sponsor a child in Nicaragua
Sponsor a child in Niger
Sponsor a child in Nigeria
Sponsor a child in Peru
Sponsor a child in Pakistan
Sponsor a child in Rwanda
Sponsor a child in Senegal
Sponsor a child in Sierra Leone
Sponsor a child in Somaliland
Sponsor a child in South Africa
Sponsor a child in Tanzania
Sponsor a child in Thailand
Sponsor a child in Uganda
Sponsor a child in Vietnam
Sponsor a child in Zimbabwe
There are four places to go where you can sponsor a child online:
1. Sponsor a child with World Vision
2. Sponsor a child with Plan UK
3. Sponsor a child with Action Aid
4. Sponsor a child with Everychild
Only 14 percent of Niger’s people are functionally literate, a significant factor in the poverty that is so prevalent. Educational opportunities are limited for many boys and girls. Without good schooling, it will be extremely difficult for these children to break free from the cycle of poverty.
In the communities where World Vision is working, many families earn their living as subsistence farmers and struggle to produce enough food to feed their children. These families rarely have anything left to sell for income that might provide adequate clothing or shelter. Their primary focus is mere survival.
The people of Niger are in great need of the life-changing hope that child sponsorship can bring to their families and communities. There has never been a better time to sponsor a child in Niger.
Charity World Vision, one of the world’s leading relief and development agencies, has developed a child sponsorship scheme which links people in more affluent countries with individual children in developing countries around the world, including Niger.
Participants in the programme say that becoming a child sponsor is a meaningful and rewarding experience for both the child and the sponsor.
The scheme is simple and easy to join. Would-be-sponsors select online, from the World Vision website, where they would like to sponsor a child – for example in Niger. The web site then brings up the details of a child according to the criteria that the would-be-sponsor specifies, with a picture, details of their age, hobbies and situation.
If the sponsor wishes to go ahead, the sponsorship can begin right there in then. Sponsors fill out a form and a direct relationship is set up between the sponsor and the child in Niger.
Sponsors are sent an information pack with further details about the child in Niger. The sponsor can, in turn, then communicate with the child directly by sending letters and cards. You can even make a visit if you want to, to the community where the child lives.
The charity keeps the sponsor updated on the work that is being carried out in the child's community in partnership with local people. Sponsors receive annual reports on the progress of the child, including such information as how they are getting on at school.
The sponsor's support provides the essentials a child needs to survive such as clean water, basic healthcare and enough food. It also provides an education to try to break the cycle of poverty in Niger.
But, the charity points out, the direct relationship between the sponsor and the child also gives the child hope through the knowledge that someone cares. Although each is of course different, every sponsored child has one thing in common says World Vision - the knowledge that someone thousands of miles away cares enough about their future to help them.
Child sponsors say that it is also far more rewarding than simply giving an anonymous donation; "I have been amazed by the way the rewards far exceed the contributions I send. Watching my sponsored child grow and flourish is every bit as exciting and wonderful as watching my own children and grandchildren mature" one sponsor said.
"We've given money to charity before, but this is different because you see the person that you're helping; they're not a number or a faceless person, they're real" said another child sponsor.
Child sponsorship is also entirely affordable, and shows how a little money can go a long way. Child sponsorship costs just 60p a day, which World Vision points out is the price of a bottle of mineral water or a can of soft drink.
You may also like to consider sponsoring a child through the following trusted agencies:
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