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12 Search results for ‘Grow Hope’
The many things my child needs
What was the last thing your child needed? This New Year, World Vision asks bloggers to think about the most recent thing their children needed.
The privilege of sharing the start of an adventure
While visiting Zambia, our HR Coordinator, Gill, also met the farmers who will be taking advantage of the orange maize seeds you've given their community to help them Grow Hope.
the seeds you helped provide through our Grow Hope campaign. What she found was genuine
Ethiopia - Antsokia Valley now a success story
Fifty-five year old Desta Beletew beams with happiness. Nine years ago his family only planted teff, an Ethiopian plant from which the popular injera bread is made. He is now a successful farmer after embracing World Vision’s clarion call to take up new agricultural practices.
Valley was the focus of this past summer's Grow Hope campaign. We highlighted the work remarkable …
South Sudan: Not the Independence Day Celebration Anyone Hoped For
The situation is South Sudan is worsening. While the country marks the 3rd anniversary of its independence, nearly half the population is in need of urgent assistance. This is not the Independence Day anyone hoped for.
and Kenya. Visiting our Grow Hope garden at RHS Hampton this week has been a
Senseless Acts of Beauty
Award-winning designer John Warland takes us behind the scene at the RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show and shares his insights!
Our Grow Hope journey continues with the third in our …
Charlotte's Journey with Grow it, Cook it, Share it
Get started with your Grow it, Cook it and Share it journey with our Fundraising Specialist Charlotte!
following on from the Grow Hope
Ten Million Trees: World Vision at BBC Gardeners' World Live
The second in a trilogy of blog posts from award-winning garden designer John Warland about the second in a trilogy of gardens depicting the recovery in Ethiopia following the 1984 famine and how World Vision helped it happen.
Our Grow Hope journey continues this week with the second …
Ten Million Trees: World Vision at BBC Gardeners' World Live
The second in a trilogy of blog posts from award-winning garden designer John Warland about the second in a trilogy of gardens depicting the recovery in Ethiopia following the 1984 famine and how World Vision helped it happen.
Our Grow Hope journey continues with the second in our …
How Our Upside-Down Garden Is Turning Perceptions On Their Heads
We’re delighted to be working once again with award-winning garden designer John Warland, who explains the inspiration behind the first of three World Vision gardens: the 'upside-down’ aid crate currently on view at RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
you in a later post. Find out more about the Grow Hope campaign and the rest of this …
First Steps In Ethiopia
The Antsokia Valley in Ethiopia was one of the worst-affected areas of the 1984 famine. Today it's green, beautiful and lush with crops. World Vision never would have started our work in Ethiopia, however, were it not for this one man.
in the Antsokia Valley is the focus of our Grow Hope campaign. …
Ethiopia, 1984: "We were all waiting for our deaths."
Ansha was just 10-years-old when the 1984 famine swept across her area. Now aged 40, she vividly describes her struggle to survive, her nightmares from her childhood and how World Vision has helped to transform her life to what it is today.
that your support brings. When you join the Grow Hope
Turning a Valley of Death Into an Oasis of Life
Last year Nick Weston travelled to Ethiopia with us to see the enormous progress that had been made in the 30 years since the famine struck. As we launch our Grow Hope campaign, he reflects on what he saw and how World Vision has delivered hope to millions of people.
in the world living in fear of hunger. Grow Hope will not only raise awareness of the …