June will shortly complete Bible College study. In this brief video, she shares about her life.
FEBRUARY 2026: OUR PROGRESS
Our annual budget is more than NZD800,00 (AUD680,000 or USD485,000). So where do your donations actually go?
In total, we have 255 young people living in residential care, with an extra 11 students living outside the houses studying at Bible College. And we have 25 non-residential young people being sponsored through their high school education. Additionally, although the number is fluid, about 56 of our young people living in our residential homes are studying at university.
We own 11 of the 18 residential home properties that we use.
Our graduates have become doctors, surgeons, nurses, pastors, NGO workers, human rights lawyers, accountants, academics, school principals, IT and engineering professionals, etc. And pleasingly, our Thai and Cambodia projects are led by our graduates, while about half of the Nepali board is also composed of our graduates.
We operate a girls’ preventative sex-trafficking work based in Kolkata, India. Eighteen girls live in the home, while another two girls live outside and are studying at Bible College. In Myanmar, we have eight residential homes caring for 117 young people, with an additional nine studying at Bible College who live outside our homes. Whilst in Thailand and El Salvador, we have non-residential education projects operating. We care for seven young people and eight boys respectively. In Cambodia, we have a high school education project based in the rural provinces, where, once they have graduated high school, these 10 young people can then move into Phnom Penh and stay at one of our two university student-aged project houses, where currently 14 young people are staying.
In Kathmandu, we have four residential home projects caring for 62 students - 23 of whom are studying at university. Two of these homes are for Buddhist/Animist Sherpa children. Meanwhile, in the hills of India, we have two residential projects operating for 34 young people from Bhutan, so that they may concurrently attend university and be discipled into leadership. Once they graduate, they are happy to return to Bhutan.
In San Pedro Sula, Honduras, we have 10 boys residing in our project. These are teenage boys at risk of either gang violence or joining a gang.
We are careful with the funds that we receive, and we seek to operate as efficiently as possible.


