Credits
Frontline Focus Series
featured featured
Refugee Children Refugee Children Being an Afghan Girl
Children's Voices - Are you listening? Romania: Still Paying the Price

Being an Afghan Girl

From courageously sharing their own stories, raising awareness on human trafficking, or advocating for peace in their violent societies; children and youth across World Vision's Middle East, Eastern European and Central Asia region are changing their world. Hear their voices and join them in making that change.
Two years as an EU country and 20 years after Communism, home-alone children, farmers and the 1 in 4 children attending high-school in rural Romania, continue to pay a heavy price; often the price of hearts. In the midst of them Europe's largest minority, the Roma, face a harsh reality of exclusion, stigma and severe poverty. Illiteracy, drought and tradition conspire against them.
Micro Credit vs. Poverty Refugee Children Children on the Edge
Micro Credit vs. Poverty Refugee Children Children on the Edge
Access to capital scores big wins for families and communities. As many as 5 million children are refugees in an area from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Hindu Kush. Children with special needs are the most likely kids to turn up in government institutions..
find out more... find out more...
AIDS in Russia Iraqi Children Trapped
AIDS in Russia Iraqi Children Trapped
Russia is experiencing the fastet growing HIV and AIDS epidemic in Europe. 2-million Iraqis have fled their country and are scattered throughout Middle East.

find out more...

find out more...

slowly The Miracle Worker
World Vision needs a few good hearts to give their all to children, then let them go.
No one believed Liana had the right stuff to teach life skills to children with special needs. She proved the skeptics wrong. Now World Vision sends their toughest cases to the 55-year-old widow.
useles people Slowly, slowly, slowly
Being there for single mothers keeps children out of institutions.
never a bad word Useless People
Keeping children out of institutions and at home where they belong.
miracle Never a Bad Word
No one wants family reunification more than children in institutions.
hard road Making House Calls
Neither rain nor bad roads nor vicious dogs hamper this angel of mercy.
transitions Surviving Transitions
Street children are too often seen as the problem, rather than one of its symptoms.
day on the streets A Day on the Streets
You’ve got to be tough to live on the streets. Even more, you must be smart.
family under the Sky Family under the Stairs
Small group homes give youth the chance to break the suffocating cycle of institutionalization.
© Copyright World Vision
logo