Recent Posts

Participating in protection

Editor’s note: The following is a message that was shared with our staff around the world from Kevin Jenkins, president of World Vision International. As we share it here, we hope you find it as intriguing and worthwhile as we do. What helps children to prepare for — and cope successfully with — disasters? Why not ask them? With that simple question in mind, five organizations who regularly deal with crisis situations — including World Vision — asked 600 children in 21 disaster-vulnerable countries around the world what they thought. The answers were so powerful and informative that we turned them into a Children’s Charter for Disaster Risk Reduction, and presented them on May 12 to the third session of...
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BOLIVIA BLOGGERS: Exploring sponsorship

You’ve probably read stories — on this blog or elsewhere — of how extreme poverty can create a vicious cycle of hardship and despair for families and communities. And maybe you’ve even heard of how World Vision child sponsorship helps break that cycle — by providing essentials that empower families, like nutritious food, clean water, healthcare, education, training, and more. But where does sponsorship become more than just a simple explanation? Here at World Vision, we’re constantly asking ourselves: How do we make sponsorship a personal experience, where poverty and its remedies are embodied in the stories of real people and real places? And how can we connect our supporters with that?...
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Why I run…

Maybe running’s not your thing. So marathons wouldn’t really be your thing. Five kilometers or 42.195 kilometers — definitely not your thing. Maybe your thing is music, or sporting events, or enjoying the beautiful scenery of the Pacific Northwest. Now that sounds a lot more like the Seattle Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon. That’s because this marathon isn’t really your average running venture. Local bands play live music, and cheer squads line the roads every mile. Lake Washington neighbors come out of their homes to join the “crowd” en route from Tukwila, Washington, to downtown Seattle. It’s a “running [and I would add, outdoor entertainment] nirvana,” as the marathon Facebook page says....
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Where kids’ books meet the real story: From malaria to microloans

I had the privilege last month of traveling with World Vision to the district of Sinazongwe, Zambia, where rolling hills covered in acacia, cacti, and fruit trees look remarkably like parts of Southern California. But tucked among them are mud brick huts with thatched roofs, small vegetable gardens by muddy pools, and high racks where cobs of maize dry beyond the reach of animals. We pass a small roadside market, where women sell tomatoes, carrots, potatoes, and stalks of sugar cane beside a banana grove. The statistics of this region belie the bucolic scene. Malaria plagues a quarter of children under 5, often fatally, and affects 9 percent of the overall population, according to Rose Zambezi, World Vision’s technical adviser...
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Food is an answer, but what’s the solution?

What if there was one nutrient that would take away feelings of constant fatigue, keep hearts beating regularly, and help kids to get better grades in school and reach their potential? What if this “magical” nutrient would prevent dizziness, provide strength and energy, protect against other diseases, keep mothers from dying during delivery, and keep babies alive past their fifth birthday? If you had access to that food, would you buy it for yourself? If you had it, would you give it away — even to someone halfway across the globe? In the world of global nutrition, that nutrient does exist. It is called iron. Iron is all over the place in America — beef, pork, chicken, seafood, beans, breads,...
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