Saturday, December 17, 2005

The Cambodian Teachers Are On Their Way!




Dear Frens,

Praise God! The Cambodian teachers' visas have been approved! They will arrive in Singapore on the 26th of Dec 2005.

The 2 teachers (21 yrs old) will be bonded to Don Bosco to teach for 5 years. To help teach the poor children in Cambodia, we aim to teach them how to fish. Thus, they will be here to study English in S'pore at SSTC park mall and Cyn and Gus will be giving them tuition.

I would like to ask anyone who is interested to assist in this project to call me. We need:

1) someone to teach them how to take the bus and the MRT ( end Dec 05)

2) people who would like to take them out weekends to places that will enrich their educational experience in S'pore eg science centre, museum, library etc

3) people who have access to character building, confidence building , arts and craft courses or Montessori skills.

4) people who can teach PowerPoint and Microsoft office access data base

5) All other ideas welcomed!

The teachers will be here 3 to 6 months depending on how they perform in school. Please join us in making a difference in the lives of many children in Cambodia who will gain from this project of immersing their teachers in an English speaking environment of Singapore.


God Bless,
Mill
http://www.gimg.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

God Is Good!

God is Indeed Good!

In one short month, Angeline has managed to go to Cambodia 2 times!

There are so many wonderful friends with wonderful hearts! We are all so blessed and we know it! Sharing with the poor is a way we can give our Thanks to God, for what we have received in our lives.

Angeline in this trip, hand carried 91kgs, believe it or not!

We managed to send through Angeline, to Sr. Ched of Don Bosco, a Roland keyboard from Grace, more vitamins from Lai Siong and Jocelyn, another 10,000 panadols from Mr Poh Peng Hoe, 3 tape recorders/MP3 players from Samantha Yap.

Magic happens when we allow God to lead and pool our efforts together.

As St Catherine says:
"I know nothing. I was nothing. For this reason God picked me out."

- St. Catherine Laboure (1806-1876)

Through our availability to God,
We truely hope that the children will be blessed with music, better education and good health :)

Tuesday, November 15, 2005


Apart from thanking Angeline and H. Richert for their effort, time and generosity of Spirit for carrying the 6 heavy cartons to Phnom Penh, Don Bosco..We would also like to thank : Posted by Picasa
Wong Lai Siong for thousands of $ of vitamins and medicine
Mr Poh Peng Hoe for 10,ooo panadols
Annie Tan and Jeremy Fu for Dvd players!

"I shall reflect on myself and ask: "What have I done for Christ? What am I doing for Christ? What ought I do for Christ?"
- St. Stanislaus Kostka ( 1550-1568)

Wednesday, September 21, 2005


Sponsorship of 2 Cambodian Teachers to Singapore

Dear friends,
To help poor and the under-privileged, we have taken a bold step to accept the request of the Don Bosco's nuns to send their teachers here for 6 months of education. We have put this project in belief of God's Providence

Praise the Lord, through His kind intervention, we have managed to secure a 6-month scholarship for the 2 teachers (age 22 yrs) to study at SSTC, airfare for their flight here and back and home-stay for one of the teachers.

The target is to upgrade their English language skills, office skills and immerse them in Singapore's English speaking environment.

When they return to Cambodia, they will be bonded to teach at the Don Bosco's school for 5 years. They will be teaching Don Bosco's two-year secretarial course students, aged 19-23.

The students taking this secretarial course are very poor and if they do not get a chance to study a skill, there is a high chance that they will be taken advantaged of and exploited by the world's oldest trade for women.

As at now, we are waiting for the student visas to be approved by the Singapore immigration. We are expecting them to arrive here in Oct/Nov 05, if all goes well.

The outstanding issues we have for this project are :

1) We need kind individuals to help with their food and transport allowance and pocket money for the duration of their stay.

2) We need to find someone who can provide home-stay for one of the two teachers.

3) A person who is able to provide Personality Development, Leadership Skills training, Powerpoint and Access.

4) Friends who can provide time and effort over weekends to take them for activities which would allow them to grow and benefit from their stay and interaction with us, in Singapore.

Point one, is of course a matter of great urgency. Those who feel called to help with any amount of sponsorship for their living allowances do get in touch with Lynette or myself.

Yours In Christ,

Mill



Posted by Picasa

Sponsors from the UK



Father Damien Sponsors Heng Somaly's Education
It's wonderful to see how one good deed of kindness in our own hearts, can lead so many to generously make-a-difference in lives of the less privilege in Cambodia. Posted by Picasa



Across the sea, from Singapore to UK, with the efforts of John & Lisa, Heng Somaly, can now study one more year in school. This will allow her to find a better job when she graduates.

Love and kindness for each other brings people and countries closer. It's a bond that raises humanity, a saving grace for us all.

Thursday, August 25, 2005











Many Thanks to our anonymous sponsor. Posted by Picasa
As Martin Luther so aptly says:

"What is it to serve God and to do His will? Nothing else than to show mercy to our neighbor.
For it is our neighbor who needs our service; God in heaven needs it not." -- Martin Luther

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Yeang Ryna is Sponsored!



Yeang Ryna has been sponsored for a year of secretarial course at Don Bosco.

Her father's two feet have been amputated since the war (Pon Pot). But he repairs bicycles in front of his house in order to earn a living. Her mother sells native cakes in front of her house, too. But the family earning is very small. Posted by Picasa

We hope that this sponsorship extended to her will make a difference to her life and that of her family.

Her kind Sponsors are Paul Raj & Friends, Anne Low and Theresa Sim.

"I tell you, that if you will not do good to the poor, God will not do good to you; in the hour of your death it shall be measured out to you with the same measure with which you have measured out to such as these. "
- Saint Camillus de Lellis (1550-1614)

Anonymous Angel


Thank You for your Heart of Gold!

We would like to thank anonymous friend of AFG for her support in our cause to support the education of the Cambodian children. Posted by Picasa





Sponsorship allocation:

USD$4000 - please use to furnish the kindergarten at Tuol Kork - furniture, books, playground, study equipment and maintenance. Yours to spend for your kinder Sis My Hahn :).

USD$1,400 - please reserve for upgrading of teachers ie airtickets ,courses, pocket money.If not used let us know we want to re-allocate.

USD$1,100 - for Phum Chreh Rachana's 2nd,3rd and 4th yr education. ( First year education already sent earlier this year to you,amount $541.19)

USD$1,000 for outreach to new villages ( tents, toys, school books etc)

USD$1,000 for Battambang.

USD$1,000 for Sroh Socheat and Proh Sophir

USD$500 for Sisters Multi Vitamins.



Praise God!


Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Christmas 2005 Collection - Let Jesus be Alive in us!


Dear Friends,

Hello again!

We are now targeting to collect a 20 foot container of goods for Cambodia.. If you feel you are able to help by collecting and packing in your own small groups, be it work friends, church friends or neighbourhood friend, please contact me.




Your assistance is this project will be invaluable.


Guidelines for Group Leaders
1) All goods collected must be brand new. The customs there charge duty and taxes for second hand or used items.

2) Packing of goods must be under the group leader's control. ie leader must ensure that goods are tightly and well packed before it is sent to the freight forwarder for storage till we have accumulated enough. I will give the address to interested parties who can do the collection.Please pack efficiently because the freight is expensive and is taken care off by sponsored money ( only partially raised).

3) A 20 ft container takes about 200 cartons of size 2 ft by 1 ft cartons.

4) Please see attached shipping mark that has to be pasted on 2 sides of all cartons. Please only fill in the description and leave the rest blank.

5) Description should only state - 'mens' , 'ladies', 'childrens', 'toys', 'shoes', 'winterwear'.
Fill cartons with only 1 generic item. Do not mix mens and ladies wear or mens and kids wear together into 1 carton.
The nuns do not have the manpower to sort when it arrives in Cambodia.

6) There will be a cut off date for collection which will be comunicated to the group leaders.
Target delivery hopefully before Christmas ( sometime in Sept/October 05)- so we can together send a message of Hope and Love from us in the name of our Lord.

Item needed
educational toys, cassette recorders, stuff toys etc
kids wear
shoes - mainly slippers
ladies wear - NO shorts or tank tops
mens wear
winter wear
underwear
If you have any queries please email me.

Like Mother Theresa says :
"We cannot all do great things but we can do small things with great love."

God Bless,
Mill

Tuesday, July 12, 2005


Movie Clip - Thank you DHL and All Sponsors Posted by Picasa

Monday, July 04, 2005


Dear Friends, Posted by Picasa
This piece of land you see is part of the Don Bosco Teuk Thla School, donated by the US Aid. The land has been left empty for many years because there is not enough funds to build a proper school.

Currently, they have only a few classrooms and some makeshift ones. If a proper building can be built on this land, more children can be taken off the streets and given a proper education. Most of us take education for granted but for all these children it is the only chance out of poverty and abuse.

We hope that we can find like-minded people who will want to contribute to building this school of hope...
Paing Suen -->
Sadly few months ago Paing Kosal left school to work in a construction site. His brother Paing Suen has taken over his education sponsorship...17/12/06
"Paing Kosal, is studying in grade 6. He is very intelligent and is usually in between the 3 and 6 rank in his class of 49 students.He is an orphan,eldest of four siblings.He is determined to study hard and bring up his other younger siblings" - Sis Ophriini
Praise God!! An anonymous angel has sponsored him for the next 4 years of his education!
Posted by Picasa

Thursday, June 02, 2005

John & Lisa's visit to Cambodia; Phom Penh


My friends from UK, John & Lisa just visited Cambodia after a stint in S'pore.

They have sponsored the education of 'Chenda' the Cambodian girl.

I am sharing with you an account of their experience in Cambodia because I cannot describe the atmosphere in Cambodia, the life of the kids and the work of Don Bosco Schools any better than they have already done so in their email.

I hope all who view this website will feel called to help these under privileged children and yound adults so that they may have a better life through education.

Yours In Christ,
Mill

John & Lisa - Their Account of Cambodia:

lisajohnbackpacking@yahoo.co.uk>To: Lisa & John <lisajohnbackpacking@yahoo.co.uk>Date: Fri, 20 May 2005 14:27:16 +0100 (BST) Subject: Hello from Phnom Penh Cambodia


Traffic here is even more crazy than Siem Reap. It comes from every direction on both sides of the road. Cars, motodups (motorcycles), tuk tuks and bicycles. You even see up to 7 people on 1 motorcycle: 4 adults and 3 children hanging off the sides! No helmets and no license needed…scary and absolutely have to see it to believe it.

Whilst here we also visited the darker side of Phnom Penh. One of the many prisons, the Former Khmer Rouge Security Prison (S21) was there the Pol Pot regime tortured over 20,000 victims over a 4 year period in an attempt to eradicate intellectuals and return Cambodia to an agricultural society.\n He killed the educators and the educated even to the extreme of anyone wearing glasses was considered to be an intellectual.

We also went to the Killing Fields (again one of many) where 17,000 men, women and children met a brutal death and then were buried in mass graves. As you enter, there is a tall white monument housing thousands of unearthed skulls and are arranged by the victims ages (photo 371). It is truly a harrowing experience.

In the distance beyond the mass graves we noticed a pond with a group of young naked children playing in the water whilst a few older children scrubbed down their cows. (photo 382) They were all laughing and having fun. Evidence that life in Cambodia has moved on although the poverty is as strong as ever.


Pond water is used for cooking, drinking, washing, cleaning – absolutely everything. This is the same water the animals use. There are many landmine victims and poverty beyond comprehension. Yet they always have a big smile to offer you.


We arrived in Phnom Penh during their Khmer New Year which similar to Thailand is an excuse for a nationwide water fight. But here not only do they drench you with buckets of water but then they douse you with talcum powder, leaving you looking like a human pancake. We experienced this first hand!


The highlight of our trip to Cambodia was the time spent with the Sisters and volunteers at Don Bosco School. They house a group of 132 girls, teaching them secretarial skills, social skills and hygiene. (photo 628) They also look after 17 special girls with tragic backgrounds and often a very bad home life. There is also a kindergarten here with a further 120 children. (photo 653)


We also visited a village school managed by the nuns with 400 children. The Sisters provide a hot lunch which is probably the only meal these children get each day and yet they all wanted to share their food with us when we arrived.


We brought them each a notebook for their studies and enough sweets for each of them to have a few. You would have though we had given them a million dollars. Their faces where glowing with happiness and the biggest smiles you have ever seen. (photo 563) They put their hands together as if in prayer and bow to you. This is how they greet you and also how they say thank you. After that we visited yet another school with 300 children (who were all taking their naps). So sweet to witness.


All of these schools survive on charity alone. One large bag of rice costs $13 and will feed one of the schools for 1 week. It is just amazing what they survive on. At the schools they children are not only taught their normal classes, but also taught basic English, social skills and hygiene (which most are not taught at home).


But the interesting thing is that these Catholic nuns are teaching in a 95% Buddhist community. They explained they do not teach religion but do teach the importance of prayer.We passed onto the nuns a great tradition taught to us called "Group Therapy" where each evening at dinner you take turns talking about the positive things that happened in your day. The nuns loved it and couldn't wait to share it with the other sisters from other groups and of course their students. (Troy and Jolee, you will never know how much your family tradition has had such an amazing affect around the world!)


Our last day in Cambodia we had the privilege of meeting a young lady we have chosen to sponsor called Chenda. She is one of the 17 "special" girls at Don Bosco. She has had so many tragic experiences in her 21 years it is incredible. Now she wants to be a psychologist and help others. She is learning English and tried so hard to express her gratitude to us for helping her. She sat holding our hands and gave us lots of hugs. When we departed she said with tears in her eyes "Happy New Year Mom and Dad."


We all had tears as we left Cambodia. Those few weeks had such impact on our minds and our hearts and have helped us appreciate just how lucky we are for such basics like clean water, electricity and homes with real floors, walls and furniture.

Next email will be from Vietnam.


Lots of love ,
Lisa and John

Thursday, May 05, 2005

Message from Sis Ched of Don Bosco


Big Thanks from Cambodia!

Dear Paul Raj and Friends,

It has been quite a time since I last communicated with you. My monitor broke down and our e-mail was a mess for some days because we changed our main user account. I hope you have received the message of acknowledgment I sent for our student Srey Long. Sr. Ophriini has sent you too the acknowledgement for Pheap Srei Neath. I think it would be better to have a joint letter of acknowledgment for your file.

Many thanks for such a big help you've extended to our students - S$1,400. The two are really poor, suffering but studying hard so as to help their family in the future. Hope one day you can come and meet them.

You know, you made Srey Long very happy. Her mother died recently of cancer. It was a big blow for her and her brother. She's the most affected because she was the one who took care of the mother. She's very, very closed with her. It's sad that after her mother's death she came back to school for a week and then, she became very, very ill. The brother said she needs an operation. We have not heard anything from the brother after that. We'll try to follow her up and give you the news. We unite ourselves in prayer that she may pass through this trial in life.

Thank you! You made a big difference in the life of our students. The thought that they have friends out there who care consoles them in moments of difficulties.

May the Lord bless you for taking part in our mission for the young. He cannot be outdone in generosity. You're greatly blessed! The Sisters pray for you daily.

A very meaningful month of Mary!

with our love and prayers,
Sr. Ched



Friday, April 29, 2005


Pheap Srei Neith - Aged 15 Posted by Hello- her education next semester is sponsored by the kind hearts of Anne Tan, Martinus, Jocelyn, Sam & Friends and Paul Raj & Friends...

We should learn from St. Augustine who said:

"Trust the past to God's mercy, the present to God's love and the future to God's providence."
-- St. Augustine of Hippo

Sok Phirom (left) - wants to be a doctor...he is now sponsored by Dr Mark Thong.
Moung Srei Touch (right), intelligent and aged 15 ..is by God's grace sponsored by Susanna & Han... Posted by Hello

This is Chenda - Education sponsored by John Bishop & Lisa Whitman. Desire to be a psychologist..very promising student!  Posted by Hello

Srey Long is Sponsored!

Praise God for Paul Raj & Friends, Dom Yeo and Kat Chan - Srey Long has a chance to study another year! Posted by Hello

So Rachana is Sponsored!

X'mas Wishes from So Rachana Xmas 2006

Age 15, studying Grade 6 - Next year's education sponsored by Patsy! Thank you! Posted by Hello

The world says, The more you take, the more you have. Christ
says, the more you give, the more you are.

-- Frederick Buechner

 Posted by Hello

Monday, April 04, 2005


"Greetings from all of us. Yesterday the grdes 5 & 6 children had a wonderful time in the sea.For almost all of them, this was their first and so they were taking the sea water home for their families. " - Sis Ophriini
Posted by Hello

Tuesday, March 22, 2005


Socheat - girl standing on the left Posted by Hello

How the 'Cambodia Project' came to be...

Our Cambodia project started because my buddy and I felt called to go to Cambodia for a visit.

We, as a group of friends have been sponsoring the education of a girl named Socheat for the past year. We wanted to better understanding of Don Bosco School and meet Socheat.

Don Bosco School is a vocational school. They teach young children how to read and write and teach older children a life skill. When they finish their education, the Don Bosco nuns will find job placements for them.

The Don Bosco Schools have both boys and girls schools. Boys learn metal work etc whilst the girls learn cooking, sewing, secretarial courses, office administration etc.

When we were in Cambodia for 2 weeks in De 04/Jan 05 – we were amazed at how well the kids were being educated , how kind and untiring the nuns were in their vocation to help the under privileged. We also saw first hand the poverty in Cambodia.

When we got back, we put our photographs together and shared the situation of the Cambodia kids with friends. Many people were and is still keen to help...

We communicate with the nuns at Don Bosco, to update us on the needs of these children.
We hope that we can find more like-minded people, who have a heart for the poor.

We believe that help comes not just in the form of material things but assistance in sponsoring their education so that in time they would be able to help themselves.

Education will ensure that they are able to find proper jobs, find self worth, self esteem and then as educated adults, they return what they have received to their fellowmen.

No effort will ever be in vain... Posted by Hello

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