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Leave a gift in your will

By leaving a legacy today, you can give tomorrow’s children a better future. When you remember Enfants du Monde in your will, you can be sure that your generosity will continue to have an impact beyond your own lifetime.

You can leave Enfants du Monde a sum of money, an item of value (a rug, a painting or a piece of jewellery for example) or real estate, and still provide for your own family as you would wish. And you can of course change your mind at any time.

As an officially recognised charity, Enfants du Monde is completely exempt from inheritance tax.

      Please send me your booklet on wills, legacies and bequests



      Contact: Kerstin Blidi

      Phone +41 (0) 22 798 88 81
      or email

      If you would like further information on the different ways you can remember Enfants du Monde in your will and the steps you need to take, please contact me. I will be happy to answer any questions you may have discreetly and in the strictest confidence.


      Help to make the world a better place by remembering disadvantaged children in your will!

       

       

       

      By leaving a legacy today, you can give tomorrow’s children a better future. When you remember Enfants du Monde in your will, you can be sure that your generosity will continue to have an impact beyond your own lifetime.

      You can leave Enfants du Monde a sum of money, an item of value (a rug, a painting or a piece of jewellery for example) or real estate, and still provide for your own family as you would wish. And you can of course change your mind at any time.

      As an officially recognised charity, Enfants du Monde is completely exempt from inheritance tax.

       


      Zeimabou Mankayla, a student in Niamey (Niger):
      "I am 13 years old. I’m going to school for the first time in my life. My parents never sent me to school before because they never had the means to pay for my tuition. Here, at the School for a Second Chance, the courses are free. I am learning to read and write in Zarma, my native language. I am also learning French: that’s important, because it’s the official language of my country. Some day I want to be a doctor."