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Caring Creates Transformation
Miriam is a sixth-grade Egyptian student in primary school. She is appreciative that she was accepted into the Finding Freedom Through Friendship tutoring program this year. Mariam’s mother is a waitress, and her father works in a plastic recycling factory. Not typical of an Egyptian family, Mariam’s parents are separated. Her older brother lives with…
Generational Poverty: What FFF Is Doing To Help
Generational poverty is a significant challenge faced by numerous developing countries in the world today, posing a serious threat to the well-being of millions of children. This inequality in society has long-lasting effects on future generations, and it is an issue that Finding Freedom Through Friendship (FFF) works diligently to address. Those most at risk…
Breaking the Cycle of Illiteracy in Guatemala
Gladis is the first member of her family for at least two generations who will receive an education that starts at an appropriate age. She is a petite six year old and will be in parvulos this year (parvulos is a grade between kindergarten and first grade in Guatemala). Kindergarten in Guatemala is essentially nothing;…
How can an illiterate mother possibly be successful in running a store?
Hope for Women-Inspire, Transform and Sustain.
A Note of Gratitude From One of Our Students
Finding Freedom remains committed to our scholarship students as they negotiate the unending challenges of virtual education. Francisco has big dreams for himself.
The Lost Boys of Guatemala
Their photographs absorb space in the recesses of our computer hardware as well as my own cerebral gray matter. Some photo files document our long-term, current relationships with the mothers and their children in Finding Freedom through Friendship. Other images are the only tangible proof that a friendship ever existed; photos showing that we at…
