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The mission of the National Bone Marrow Transplant Link is to help patients, caregivers, and families cope with the social and emotional challenges of bone marrow/stem cell transplant from diagnosis through survivorship by providing vital information and personalized support services.
Our mission is to invest in the future of our youth by providing a nurturing group home for foster girls or girls on probation aged 12-17. We are not just a place to eat and sleep but a safe homelike environment that gives our girls the opportunity to build their self esteem and make positive life choices. Our ultimate goal is to assist our residents in the smooth transition from the home to independent living and/or reuniting with their family.
California Black Women’s Health Project (CABWHP) works to improve the health and wellness of Black women and girls across California by providing culturally centered education, advocacy, outreach, and policy work. The organization trains community health advocates, delivers health education and support programs, and pushes for policy changes to address health inequities affecting Black women and girls.
Their Christ-centered purpose is to provide family-style, residential care and sustainable solutions that fight against Haiti’s orphan crisis. They provide holistic, residential care for children in crisis by building and operating Children’s Villages with multiple family-style homes lead by Haitian House Mothers. By utilizing our resources, relationships, and our American and Haitian staff, they strive to create a circle of care around each child with the intent of giving every boy and girl the chance to reach their God-given potential. Second, they will utilize our platform to help create sustainable and dignified jobs to push against the poverty-driven child abandonment and child slavery cycles. The best orphan care strategy starts with a fight to keep families together.
The project was established in 2006 in response to the plight of AIDS oprhans living with poor, subsistence farmers in the rural community of Butula, Western Kenya. Half of the children in the community are orphaned from AIDS. The relatives and neighbors caring for the orphans live on less than a dollar a day. They cannot afford a pencil and uniform for all of the children in their care. These people live on the maize, beans and kale they grow by hand. Many children are inadequately fed. Hungry children cannot learn. The aim of the project is to provide pencils, uniforms and a school lunch. In one year, the number of orphans attending school has risen from 150 to 385 children (48% are girls). There are school projects to sustain the program in the future. These include chicken, pig and cattle rearing, a tree nursery and a corn grist mill. Your donation will ensure that these children and their community will have hope for the future.