article / Tháng 8 11, 2004
Now Nertila can walk: children with disabilities get first real chance at life
Nertila cannot walk or talk, yet she has good upper body strength and all the exuberance of a young girl. She sure knows how to throw stones at her two-year-old sister Suela and she effortlessly climbs the lower limbs of the trees in her back yard.
publication / Tháng 2 6, 2014
Temotu Earthquake and Tsunami One Year Anniversary Report
On 6 February 2013, an 8.0 magnitude earthquake and tsunami swept through the Solomon Islands’ remotest area. More than 6,500 people were affected and 23 communities were substantially damaged following the disaster.
article / Tháng 3 8, 2022
Meet the women daring to end malaria in Malawi
The “man’s world” that James Brown wrote about some 50 decades ago, continues to crumble before our eyes as many impeccable women continue to break glass ceilings in demonstrating their capabilities to read and lead. At World Vision in Malawi, we have many of these women, some of whom are helping us fight malaria.
article / Tháng 2 7, 2009
Georgia: 6 months after conflict World Vision continues to help thousands displaced
At its height, the conflict displaced an estimated 180,000 people with Georgia bearing most of the brunt. Tbilisi swelled in population by nearly 10% overnight with almost 100,000 living in more than 800 collective centres -- mainly schools and abandoned government buildings.
article / Tháng 1 4, 2013
Albanian and Serbian children heal wounds of war; promote peace
With the pitter-patter of rain falling on the tent above them, parents and community members look on, hardly able to believe what they are seeing right in front of them. Children from Kosovo and Serbia sit on the ground together.
publication / Tháng 4 29, 2016
COMM Facilitator Overview
Resources for implementing COMM within communities
article / Tháng 12 11, 2007
Meeting my Roma sister: a tale of two thirty-somethings
Today, Marta has six children, ages six to eighteen, and a granddaughter, almost a year old. All eight of them live in a one-room house (a former storage shed) with no electricity or running water.