Donate Now

If you would like to help support our cause, please use the donation button below. Thank You!






Thursday, July 12, 2012

Motivation to help the young kids in Lang Son- stay in school, have a decent chance for a future


 recent stats in Lang Son showed that of 400 children who attended  primary school (k-5), less than 200 went on to lower secondary (6-8), and only 58 children went on to higher secondary (9-12) please consider contributing to our 5LE (love education fund) in Lang Son - help us expand our program to keep more kids in school so they have a chance to earn a decent living. http://www.facebook.com/charitabledreams

Police summon client for buying teen's virginity

Police in Cao Loc district in the northern province of Lang Son have summoned a wealthy man who allegedly paid for the virginity of a teen girl, a victim in a child prostitution ring headed by two local teenage girls.
The 14-year-old girl Ha Thanh X. from Yen Trach commune, who was forced into the sex ring, revealed the identity of a client.
She told investigators that in May, when she was going home after school, a friend asked her to hang out. After that, the pair went to the residential home of 17-year-old Hoang Thu Trang, who has been recently charged with prostituting children.
"When we arrived, Trang invited us in for water and then telephoned someone. After that, we got in a luxurious 7-seat car heading towards Lang Son city," the teen girl recalled.
"That afternoon, Trang suggested that she take us to Hai Phong, and I agreed as if someone hypnotized me," she added.
The victim said the car belongs to a man in his 40s who has a dragon tattoo on his leg, and she was forced to sleep with him at a room on the fifth floor of a hotel in Hai Phong that night.
Before taking away her virginity, the man had given her a white capsule. The following morning, he had sex with the girl once again and gave her wads of VND200,000 banknotes, though most of the cash was pocketed by Trang later.
Previously, on July 4, police in Cao Loc District said they broke up a child prostitution ring headed by two local girls - Hoang Thi Thu Trang and 13-year-old Hoang Thi H.
Investigators said they trafficked five to seven elementary students between age 12 and 15.
Men reportedly paid VND10 million (US$500) to VND20 million (US$1,000) per appointment, while the two suspects pocketed two thirds of the cash.
All prositution is illegal in Vietnam. recent stats in Lang Son showed that of 400 children who attended  primary school (k-5), less than 200 went on to lower secondary (6-8), and only 58 children went on to higher secondary (9-12) please consider contributing to our 5LE (love education fund) in Lang Son - help us expand our program to keep more kids in school so they have a chance to earn a decent living. Donate here or learn more at
http://www.facebook.com/charitabledreams  

Saturday, May 12, 2012


I'm sharing this because I like it. I like what Pam Sweester founder of the Vietnamese Heritage Camps in Colorado says here about listening to our children. Our family loves to go to her Heritage Camp each summer. 

http://www.heritagecamps.org/

I once heard an "expert" in the field of adoption talk about Mother's Day as a time to sit with your children and talk about their birth mother, and about how much she sacrificed for them, and must have loved them to be able to give them up.  So, being the young, impressionable mother that I was at the time, I gave it a shot with my kids.  Whoa, did that ever NOT work!  My daughter looked at me like I was crazy, and said, "I don't want to talk about this," storming off in a huff. My son burst into tears and informed me I ruined Mother's Day for him, and he wasn't about to give me the construction paper flower he made for me at school!
Here, I really thought I was going to open up all kinds of wonderful dialog with my kids about their birth mother, after learning from the "expert" that it was the perfect time to do so! Instead, it seemed to take away their chance to just be "normal," and give their mom a construction paper flower.  I have learned a great deal since then...not from any "expert," but from my children. They talked about their birth parents when THEY wanted to, when THEY were ready, not when I sat them down for a forced conversation.  I am sure there are still experts out there saying Mother's Day is a good time to open up this conversation and I also have no doubt that for some families, it really does work in the best way. I only want to offer another point of view based on experience. A very wise and wonderful Korean adult adoptee once said to me, "It is THEIR journey, not yours....let them take it and feel glad when they ask you to join them."  Both of my kids have taken me on their journeys now and then, in their own very different ways, and for that I am indeed glad. Nothing makes me happier in the world than being their mother!

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Every Child's Dream...





With the help of donors we provided 14 bikes to our school. The bikes are loaned to students who need them to get to and from school. When they graduate from 5th grade they will turn them back in for the next student in need. 
In addition 2 of our sponsors provided bikes to the students they sponsor. Sweet!










L2R, me, Tami, Natalie, Steve, Student Ling, Lacey behind her, Lelan, & Les receiving gifts of Thank You Drawings from LS students!!! 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Here's a video of photos bringing us almost up to date.
Photos include trip to Lang Son, the school, our volunteers, school kitchen for the Food for Thought Lunch Program, students, chickens for the Lay it Forward Chicken Project, the new school chicken coop being built, sponsored students and more.
For more photos and videos go to http://www.facebook.com/charitabledreams
                                                   
To contribute:    Donate here above or on facebook
check us out and LIKE us on Facebook
Please share our work with others!
Thanks

Monday, March 26, 2012

How's that for joy! Diu's happiness lights up her home as she opens gifts her sponsor sent her. Her home cannot compare to ours. We have glass in our windows, refrigerators, indoor bathrooms that flush...the differences are many. In addition to these gifts Diu's family received 30 chickens and starter feed,  oil to cook and fish sauce too. Diu and her sister are sponsored to help them attend our school. We also gave them a little cash gift too from the sponsors.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

We opened one suitcase and blew up a beach ball. This is what the kids did when we threw it up in the air.
They were all into it. I loved seeing them be excited and happy and eager to play! This is from one beach ball!
Imagine what a real playground would do.

Sunday- the students at school

Les is having fun with the kids. They gather around and are just so much fun. To accommodate our schedule the school was closed Friday. The staff and students came on Sunday, the first day we could see them. It was heartwarming. 

Saturday, March 24, 2012

charitable dreams

charitable dreams

We're on the move to Lang Son. Here is Lelan and our friend and host, Khue bringing gifts and donations from friends in Hanoi. Please join us on facebook at charitable dreams and at families in vietnam.
https://www.facebook.com/charitabledreams     and        http://www.facebook.com/familiesinvietnam

Monday, February 6, 2012

Spirit of Compassion...recently a dear friend HoanDoanMinh 
shared with me her courage to speak to a group about our work. Listeners responded and our students received socks, warm socks, lots of socks and more.
  Even better this inspired her friend to fund raise for poor children in the North. And he is sharing our photos with others to inspire their compassion. Some of this activity will come through our fund and some of it won't because these friends live in VN and can visit our school and other places too where children hope for warmth and kindness. 
Here is the heart of the matter: together we've inspired others, like we were inspired to reach out and deliver love.

Reality Check
Please take a look at this article. It gives you an idea 
 of what it takes to attend school in Lang Son
Thank you for taking a look. If you want to help 
one way is to click on this link- scroll down on left
help the children of Lang Son
     Lang Son Projects 
Donate on top of page or to see more photos and learn more www.facebook.com/charitabledreams
please LIKE us on Facebook
thanks

  
We can call it a reality check.
Bonnie

Schooling in Vietnam: a stark contrast (photos included)

Some children are born rich and some are born poor. This is an undeniable fact of life in countries across the world, and there is little humans can do to alter it.
However, this inequality in social status should never be allowed to morph into an ugly inequality of educational opportunities, since education is, by far, the most effective way to help a poor person escape the poverty imposed on him by the circumstances of his birth.

student 2
In a remote area of the nothern province of Lang Son, two students are crossing a river unaided to get to their school, Tinh Bac Elementary School located in Loc Binh District. Hundreds of others like them have to cross the river, be it low or high tide, to go to school every day.
student 4
This little first-grader, like many others in the northern province of Quang Ninh, rows her boat to school daily.
student 6
In the northern province of Lang Son, a group of students paddle a half-floating, half-sinking bamboo raft to school. No accompanying adult and, even worse, no lifebuoy!

student 8
These elementary students have to walk through the forests and climb the mountains for 2 hours each day to go to Lung Ca Elementary School in the northern province of Thai Nguyen.

student 10
In the meantime, this little girl is hopping from one pointed mountain rock to another to get to Lung Ca.

student 13
To these children, schooling is a risky adventure.      
you can find complete article at TUOITRENEWS

Wednesday, January 25, 2012


Due to an intensifying cold front, from 1-7am today morning (Wednesday), temperatures at the Mau Son tourism zone in the northern mountainous province of Lang Son dropped to minus 1.4 degrees Celsius.
The area is enveloped in snow and winds blowing at force 6.
Ha Van Tien, director of the local weather forecasting agency said that in the past three days, temperatures in Mau Son have continuously dropped by 0.2 to 1 degree Celsius per day.
Snow covers the bushes, walkways, and grass.
74-year-old local man Dang Tang Phuc told Tuoi Tre that such snow is very rare.
The mercury is forecast to drop further, especially at night in the next few days.
For other areas in Lang Son province, the temperatures stay very low, fluctuating from 4-9 degrees Celsius.
Despite the cold, many various activities are being held to celebrate Tet.