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19 Search results for ‘Panchbibi’
The Seed - Panchbibi 2018 update
The Seed - Panchbibi 2018 update
Santa is 10. She lives with her parents in Panchbibi. …
The Seed - Ghoraghat 2018 update
The Seed - Ghoraghat 2018 update
Santa is 10. She lives with her parents in Panchbibi.
The Seed - Panchbibi 2017 update
The Seed - Panchbibi 2017 update
Your 2017 sponsorship update from Panchbibi I
The seed - Panchbibi 2016 update
your 2016 update from Panchbibi Download this update in a new window
Going for gold: Sports and sponsorship changing lives in Bangladesh
Giving girls access to sport is a great way of building confidence and a sense of empowerment. With the help of a World Vision football project, 14-year-old sponsored child Kolpona has hit the ground running, winning trophies and medals and dreaming of becoming a world-class footballer. Despite living in a poor community in central Bangladesh, Kolpona is optimistic about her future and sees new opportunities emerging…
A burden no more | Preventing child marriage in Bangladesh
After overcoming epilepsy and avoiding an arranged marriage when she was just 14, Sonia is determined to work for World Vision one day. Now 22, Sonia credits the NGO with supporting her and her family while she was young. This is her story...
Bringing hope to children like Puja
7 Puja is seven and lives in a village in Panchbibi with her
A dream of education
16-year-old Lima faced a difficult decision when her father fell ill; either go to school, or start working to support her family. Feeling like she should choose the latter, it wasn’t until a World Vision education project came to her area of Bangladesh, that she could once again pursue her dream of becoming an engineer.
Leaving nobody behind
This weekend, world leaders meet at the UN in New York to agree to a new set of global goals that charities and governments together will focus on over the next fifteen years. WVUK Social Media Manager Kate Shaw shares three stories on the subject of early/forced marriage - an area that wasn't fully tackled in the last set of goals but that she hopes will be at the top of the table this time around.
be better off married. Nilanjona lives in Panchbibi community in …
Making smiles with water
World Vision communicator Lipy Mary Rodrigues recently visited a village in northern Bangladesh to see how clean water and proper sanitation were improving the lives of children in the area.
With flying colours
Diagnosed with cancer, teenage pupil Rabbani suddenly had a lot more to worry about than how to pass his upcoming exam. But with World Vision’s help and an undying determination to succeed, he sat the test with his classmates before nervously awaiting his result
We are Living Stories
Steve is our Children's Communication Specialist, working with children in our projects around the world, to support them in developing their communication skills. In this blog, Steve shares some of the stories, directly from the children of Bangladesh along with pictures drawn by them:
Bangladesh
The latest prayers of children and communities we work with in Bangladesh
for changing fear into hope. Prayers for Panchbibi Jui is 15 years old. She slipped one day
Bangladesh: On Progress, Education and How Much There Is Left To Do
Mathew Neville, our Head of Public Engagement, gives us his final blog from his trip to Bangladesh from Dhaka where he found children picking rubbish to try to earn enough money to eat.
Bangladesh: A Remarkable Story of the Power of Child Sponsorship
It’s been an emotional and educational few days in Bangladesh for Mathew, but also for all of us back here in the World Vision offices, learning of the progress the communities are making with your support.
Bangladesh: Preparing Communities To Keep The Work Alive
Head of Public Engagement, Mathew Neville’s second blog post from visit to Bangladesh: more wonderful stories of the things he is seeing and experiencing out there.
Bangladesh: Riverboat Songs, ADP Visits and Eating with Your Hands
World Vision’s Director of Public Engagement, Mathew Neville shares the emotions of visiting an ADP in Bangladesh that has seen real growth and success.