Cambodia

Mobile Library

Lighting up the world with words!

mobile-libraryIt should always be impossible for us to accept that during evening hours while more fortunate children can be found safe at home with their families, the poverty stricken boys and girls of the same planet will often only be located roaming the unforgiving streets of the developing world. This is particularly true in various areas throughout Cambodia, where disadvantaged children are commonly found begging, working to generate income in whatever way they can, or being lured in by pedophiles who do nothing but exploit Cambodia’s most precious assets.

Refusing to accept this situation as an inconvenient truth, M’Lop Tapang Centre for Street Children in Sihanoukville decided to extend its Mobile Library which previously only toured in search of these children during the day, to also operate during the night. Says Project Director Maggie Eno:

“Our night time outreach is now more effective and fun because the M’Lop Tapang Mobile Library can be lit up and used regularly, in any location and at any time thanks to Light up the World Foundation’s efficient solar systems!”

Indeed, M’Lop Tapang’s Mobile Library regularly tours throughout deserving areas and serves up to 500 children a month through outreach work carried out by staff and volunteers on the beaches, ports, railway station and slums. But these services can now also reach children at night when they are certainly most vulnerable. Accordingly, the light which is generated by the solar panel on the bus allows the outreach team to attract these curious children and youth when most Cambodian streets are pitch black and only moving with the sounds of young scurrying feet. It is particularly heartbreaking to know that these children have often never been exposed to education and are usually forced to beg at night by their parents (also driven by poverty) to aid in their day to day survival. Although M’Lop Tapang has managed to reintegrate many of these kids back into public school and with their families, it is always important to remember that their first line of contact with our social workers is always on the street. For some kids, the library is the only safe place in their daily lives where they can just be kids, even if for only a little while.

For those children and youth who we are still on the streets but with whom we are working with and also for the ever increasing population of new kids who come to town, the M’Lop Tapang Mobile Library offers a channel of hope that sheds light on positive choices, as well as provides a fun and safe learning environment even when there is no other light for miles and miles. In fact, solar panels and LED lights have been proven to be so beneficial for M’Lop Tapang that there have been serious talks about trying to integrate them into the new M’Lop Tapang Centre that is currently under construction. Electricity prices in Cambodia are always soaring and as an NGO M’Lop Tapang is unjustly charged as a “company or factory”. With this in mind, a sustainable energy program would have a positive impact on the whole community, displaying to the world that street kids are not only bright in every sense of the word, but also environmentally conscious!

Visit Light up the World Foundation, of the University of Calgary.

Visit M’Lop Tapang website to find out more about their programs and projects.

M’Lop Tapang Health Care Program – Report 2007

The goal of M’Lop Tapang’s Health Care Program has always been to ensure free access to medical care for every vulnerable child in Sihanoukville. Our program objectives are to:

  • provide efficient, comprehensive, holistic medical care to the children & families of MT
  • provide medical care with compassion, empathy and respect for the individual patient
  • educate families about basic hygiene and prevention from illness
  • educate and empower children to better manage their own health and their family’s health

Click here for M’Lop Tapang’s 2007 Medical Report

Why Support the Angkor Hospital for Children

  • One in seven Cambodian children dies before age five – most often from preventable, treatable, and curable conditions.
  • AHC provides free, comprehensive pediatric medical care. As of 2007 nearly 500,000 children have received treatment at AHC.
  • AHC is an officially recognized teaching hospital training hundreds of Cambodian health workers each year, helping to rebuild Cambodia’s devastated health system.
  • AHC provides outreach services, specialized care for children with HIV/AIDS, and extensive health education to children and families.
  • Capacity Building and Health Education Program (CBHEP) works directly with communities teaching basic nutrition, agriculture, and illness prevention. CBHEP also helps provide clean water to rural communities through the Pure Water and Literacy for Cambodian Villages Project.
  • Dedicated to sustainable and environmentally-friendly development, AHC purses green architecture and clean technologies wherever possible. AHC’s Visitor Center, scheduled to open in 2008, was designed through the generosity of Cook + fox, on of the world’s leading green architectural firms.
  • AHC is planning a Satellite Program to bring the same comprehensive, quality, and loving pediatric care to government hospitals in rural areas throughout Cambodia.
  • Read more …

An Invitation to Help Change the World

An Invitation to Help Change the World for Children in rural Cambodia
Help raise $2,500,000 the cost of construction, equipment and operations for 5 years.
A Naming Opportunity

Children suffer the most drastic consequences of poverty. In Cambodia thousands die each year of preventable and treatable disease, where it is not uncommon for a child to die of complications from respiratory infections, diarrhea, and diseases practically eradicated in the more-developed world:

  • 15% of Cambodian children, or 60,000, die before age 5
  • 35% of Cambodian children are not immunized for polio, measles, or diphtheria
  • 45% of Cambodian children under 5 are moderately to severely underweight
  • 12,000 Cambodian children under the age of 15 live with HIV/AIDS

Read more …

Angkor Hospital for Children – January 2008 Monthly Report

Thank you to all the staff and supporters who helped to make 2007 another exciting year at Angkor Hospital for Children (AHC). Following are a few highlights of some of the things we accomplished together in 2007.

Click here for the complete January 2008 Monthly Report from AHC.

40ft Container Sent to Cambodia

container1

CWAF along with the help of many others filled a 40′ container and shipped it to Cambodia. The container was filled with everything from bicycles for the children at M’Lop Tapang to ultrasound machines for Angkor Hospital for Children. Here are some the emails to CWAF:

CWAF, the container! Thank you! David and I had a seriously mad day at port. I can now totally understand why you were stressed filling it, so much stuff! We are still sorting it out as it got dark and we only half emptied. We already have received great stuff and the bikes were a huge bonus! Will email you more when we have it all unpacked. Warm wishes, Maggie M’Lop Tapang, Project Director (www.mloptapang.org)

Read more …