Child Sponsorship

By giving to this category, you will help to change the life of a child and their community forever.

Donate to the Unsponsored Children's Fund

How often?

Millions of children in Asia and Africa grow up with little to no education. Extreme poverty prevents parents from being able to send their children to school. Giving towards our work with children helps free them from the cycle of poverty.

Supporting them and their whole community with healthcare, food, clean water and education helps show them the love of Jesus Christ. A gift towards Child Sponsorship gives a remote community the chance to support their young people and make the impossible possible.

Your gift can help provide a child and their community with:
  • Food
  • Clean water
  • Healthcare and hygiene
  • Education
  • Recreational activities
  • Vocational training for their parents

It only takes as little as £23 to have a huge impact in giving towards a child sponsorship so they can have a better life and know the kindness and heart of God.

Changing Lives Eternally

Through our national workers, we have the opportunity to change lives not only here and now, but eternally in Asia. Did you know that around 80,000 people die every day in the 10/40 Window? Some children may go their whole lives without ever hearing about the love of God. We can make a choice today that will forever change the fate of those who have yet to hear.

There are not enough words to thank the help that is lent from [GFA’s national workers]. Today, my daughter is alive just because of the prayer and support from GFA World. I will never be able to forget this great aid.

Belicia, whose daughter Primia and their whole family were helped with medical care, education, and loving support from GFA’s national workers

Child Sponsorships

Anjali Chandan thumbnail image

Anjali Chandan

I am a girl and I live in India. I am in grade 3, my favourite subject is math, and I love drawing.
Shahid Akhtar thumbnail image

Shahid Akhtar

I am a boy and I live in India. I am in grade 2, my favourite subject is math, and I love playing coco.
Saran Kumar thumbnail image

Saran Kumar

I am a boy and I live in India. I am in grade 3, my favourite subject is Tamil, and I love drawing.
Balambighi thumbnail image

Balambighi

I am a girl and I live in India. I am in grade 3, my favourite subject is English, and I love dancing.
Shivani Urjun thumbnail image

Shivani Urjun

I am a girl and I live in India. I am in grade 7, my favourite subject is Hindi, and I love reading.
Sagun Sony thumbnail image

Sagun Sony

I am a girl and I live in India. I am in grade 5, my favourite subject is science, and I love dancing.
Anandhu V thumbnail image

Anandhu V

I am a boy and I live in India. I am in grade 5, my favourite subject is Malayalam, and I love playing with ball.
Arpita Mondal thumbnail image

Arpita Mondal

I am a girl and I live in India. I am in grade 7, my favourite subject is math, and I love drawing.
Saijyothsna Gunja thumbnail image

Saijyothsna Gunja

I am a girl and I live in India. I am in grade 4, my favourite subject is English, and I love dancing.
Tarunkumar Mahendrabhai Chunara thumbnail image

Tarunkumar Mahendrabhai Chunara

I am a boy and I live in India. I am in beginner, my favourite subject is beginner, and I love cycling.
Barsha Chamlagain thumbnail image

Barsha Chamlagain

I am a girl and I live in Nepal. I am in grade 9, my favourite subject is English, and I love dancing.
Addanki Santhosh thumbnail image

Addanki Santhosh

I am a boy and I live in India. I am in grade 3, my favourite subject is English, and I love reading.

Education Opens Doors for Girls Future

Selyne, local development officer for GFA World’s Child Sponsorship Program set out with a goal in mind. Girls in the area were typically not given the same opportunities as boys when it came to education, and that needed to change. Selyne went into the villages to do a survey, and she visited families, looking for girls who were underprivileged and from the poorest families who needed an education. It was Selyne’s task to help parents understand the importance of education in breaking the cycle of poverty and to persuade them to let their daughters attend the program and receive an education.

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A Burden Slides Off Preteen Girl’s Back

Against an angular backdrop of steep hillsides and spacious valleys, Sahlma waged an uphill battle. A load bore down on her small frame as the girl pressed onward. The preteen shouldn’t have been working as a porter, a physically demanding job that required transporting groceries, sand and firewood up and down the mountainside to people. She didn’t like being a porter. But how else could she provide for her siblings? Sahlma’s life, like her work, was a struggle.

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