Despite being a bright child and how much she wants to go to school Aankita’s parents cannot afford to send her to school. When she grow up she wants to become a pilot.
When asked to her father, "Why are you not sending her to school?" he replied, "we would like to send her to the school, but where is the money?"
Bhim, her father, is a daily wage earner working as a laborer.
Aakriti lives with her father and her mother. Her father is sometimes employed as a laborer and her mother maintains the home.
She is in pre-school age but their parents have no motivation to send her to school. The distance to school is 30 mins walking. Singing, playing with dolls and listening to music are her favorite activities.
Because of your sponsorship, Aakriti will have new opportunities to learn and grow physically, mentally, and spiritually.
One of her neighbors said, "These families do not have any support. They need help and hopefully some organizations will help them."
Rimple's mother said, "I have been selling ice-cream to send my kids to school. But last year, they both had to drop out of school because we couldn't pay the tuition." Rimple and Rapan are brothers and sisters.
The parents have been working hard to save some money so they can send their kids back to school. Your sponsorship will help Rimple to join the school and continue with her education.
Despite being a bright child and how much she wants to go to school Aankita’s parents cannot afford to send her to school. When she grow up she wants to become a pilot.
When asked to her father, "Why are you not sending her to school?" he replied, "we would like to send her to the school, but where is the money?"
Bhim, her father, is a daily wage earner working as a laborer.
Nikesh Nepali and his parents live in a hut close to Sungabha Academy (a boarding school). Every morning on his way to work, he watches other children attend school.
He is a hardworking boy who is helping his parents make their living. He is not sure if he will ever get a chance to wear the blue and white school uniform which is standard for most students in Nepal.
Kushum Danwar is a bright eight year old girl, currently studying in Surya Jyoti English Boarding School in Grade One.
Kushum’s mother explains that she and her husband have had trouble managing money to pay for her academic expenses. They have to manage their living on less than five dollars ($5) per day, an income through daily manual labor which is very unreliable and extremely nominal to meet their daily expenditure. Whatever money they save is also spent on Kushum’s medical expenses as they had already lost their eldest child due to pneumonia, and they don’t want Kushum to face such an occurrence.
An ambition to see a bright future for their child, a common desire of every parent, has turned out to be the only desire of Kushum’s parents for which they pay a huge cost. They comprome their own basic needs to fulfill Kushum’s academic needs.
Kushum’s right to education and a bright future is the only uplifting promise for this vulnerable family. As a famous proverb goes, “droplets of water from an ocean,” the first drops of assistance will help secure not only a child’s future but will also help stabilize the future of the whole family.