Our Blog
Skip the Chocolates this Valentine’s Day, Get Your Valentine a Gift that Keeps on Giving
With Valentine’s Day right around the corner, it’s the perfect time for you to start 2021 with a full heart. And we know the perfect way for you to do that. This year, share your love not only with orphans in need but also with those you care about most. Skip the chocolates, and show a loved one you care by making a donation in their honor! It’s easy, and we’ll even mail them a card on your behalf to tell them how much you love them. Here’s how you can make it happen: Donate online to the giving area Orphan Rescue
Addressing COVID Fears in the DR: How this Kinship Project Got the Ball Rolling
Social distancing, hand sanitizer, and personal protective equipment are crucial to fighting the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. But a resource that communities also need in abundance is education. The population of the Dominican Republic is far smaller than the United States, so the number of cases seems low. However, COVID-19 is very present in their small communities. Along with it has come a surge of fear and misperception. Some refuse to leave their homes, while others refuse to wear protective equipment altogether. One of Kinship United’s in-country partners in the Dominican Republic is our friend Giovanni. He’s part of Medical
One Thing is Certain in 2021: Our Work Remains
As I sat down to write to you this year, I struggled to think of what to say. This year has been tragic in many ways, and I know many of you have fought your own hard battles. Yes, when looking back on 2020, I’m afraid the negative comes to mind first. Food insecurity is at an all-time high in the areas we serve after locusts and floods destroyed crops and closures blocked distribution routes. Diseases like malaria and HIV/AIDS are out of control after public transportation shutdowns prevented people from getting life-saving medicine. And fear of a new and Orphan Rescue
Will You Open Your Heart to Orphans Like Gloria this Christmas Season?
Kinship United serves areas where disease, extreme poverty, armed conflict, and society’s structural breakdown cause families to decay. For millions of displaced, refugee, and scattered families, there is often a moment they realize they need to separate themselves from each other so they may survive. In humanitarian aid organizations there is a name for children who have lost protection of their parents and their community – these children are known as throwaways. May we take a moment of your time to tell you about Gloria? She is just one face among many who were in a very dangerous situation until Orphans