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Kyaw`s* parents separated just after he was born. His father died when he was about two years old.

Before he came to stay at the street children`s centre, Kyaw lived with his mother in Sagaing. While his mother was out at work, she polished rice, she insisted he stay at home to take care of his sister and help with house work, cooking, and fetching water.

His wasn`t allowed to go to school.

“At home I wasn’t free. I had to look after my younger sister all the time. My big brother bullied me and my mother always shouted at me and blamed me for everything,” Kyaw says.

In 2009, teachers from the centre came to his home as part of the outreach program. Kyaw, then 12 years old, had heard about the centre and wanted to come but his mother had said no.

At that time, Kyaw couldn’t read and write. He felt he had missed out. He heard he could learn at the centre and that it was a good place.

At first he started to come now and again for a few hours each day. Then his sister went to school so he didn’t need to look after her any more. Finally his mother agreed.

After three years, Kyaw has now learnt to read and write to grade 3 or 4 level. But as a 15-year-old he should be in grade 9.

Kyaw wants to learn because he says: “When children become adults they can apply their knowledge in the world. The future depends on the children and their thoughts.

“I enjoy working together in a group here. When we are gardening and watering plants, we feel very happy. We feel we are not doing it because the monks tell us to but because we are looking after our own place. It feels like home. I call the teachers brothers and sisters. They are like friends, but also like family.

“When I fell down playing basketball and hit my head everyone looked after me,” he says. “I feel comfortable. The teachers are warm and friendly and I have lots of friends.”

When he`s older, Kyaw would like to be a rice trader. “I would like to reunite with my family when I am standing on my own feet.”

Read more about this ChildFund-supported street children`s refuge here.

*Name changed to protect this child`s identity.

It was 1992 and Michele and Peter McCarthy had just had their daughter, Hannah, the youngest of their five children. Despite having their hands full with their own family, they decided to start sponsoring a child through ChildFund Australia.

Hannah is now 22 years old and the family are supporting their second sponsored child, Siriporn from Thailand. Although they`ve been sponsoring Siriporn for the past nine years, Michele and Peter only recently decided to take the plunge and travel to Thailand to meet her.

“I wasn`t a very good sponsor, I didn`t appreciate what sponsorship was and I didn`t write very often,” admits Michele. This all began to change two years ago when Michele met a young African man at her church, who had been sponsored when he was a boy.

“He is now a doctor. I just found it so amazing to meet him, he was so grateful. He mentioned the value of having that relationship and how important it is to get letters from your sponsor and have that communication with them,” recalls Michele.

With this chance meeting encouraging her to connect further with her sponsored child, Michele and Peter decided that an upcoming holiday to Malaysia could be the perfect opportunity to pop over to Thailand and meet Siriporn, something Michele thought would simply be “a nice thing to do”.

“Then we went there and it was completely overwhelming!” she says. “For the first time it became really real.”

As Michele recalls her day with Siriporn, emotions start to flow when she thinks about the moment she saw her for the first time. “When we arrived at her school, Siriporn and her mum were waiting for us at the front gate. I just knew it was her straight away. It was like she had come out of her photo and into real life.

“I jumped out of the car and we just hugged and hugged and hugged. And she was smiling, all the photos I had seen of her and her mum they always looked very serious but she had such a big smile on her face and she just looked so beautiful.

“My head was spinning,” says Michele. “It was a bit like a dream. I had so many questions to ask her but I couldn`t remember any of them.”

After sharing a meal together, they all went back to Siriporn`s school where Michele and Peter met the school principal and some of the teachers. They also had the opportunity to go into Siriporn`s classroom and meet some of her classmates, who were very excited to meet them.

“After a while her dad came and met us, which was really wonderful,” says Michele, who learned that Siriporn`s father does not have regular work and hadn`t found work that day. “I don`t know how far away from the school they live but that was very humbling, he was a very quiet man and that really touched Peter`s heart that he was there.”

Michele and Peter are now back home in Australia and have settled back into work and daily life but they haven`t forgotten about their special day meeting Siriporn and her family.

“I was completely unprepared for the emotional part of the experience and I think that is the thing that I will always remember most,” says Michele. “Since I`ve come home, our friendship has changed, I`ve been writing and I`ve sent lots of the photos that we took from the day.

“I don`t know if it`s just me but I had always thought of sponsorship as a one-way thing,” she adds. “I was just giving money and it wasn`t a big deal, it`s not a lot of money and it`s not a big sacrifice. But to have that relationship and then to actually meet them in person is completely amazing because now I have this beautiful connection with this person. It`s more than just contributing to the program, it is about being involved in her life, with her family, her future and all the things that she does.

“Sponsorship has become completely different for me. My eyes have been opened.”