Enfants du Monde is approved by the Swiss seal of quality, ZEWO, which guarantees transparency and the responsible use of donations received.

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In 2012, Enfants du Monde boasts:

  • 12 education and health projects in 7 countries across 4 continents;
  • 51,000 children benefiting from these projects;
  • 3 university programmes for trainers, teachers and health workers;
  • 3 coordination offices in Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, and Guatemala;
  • 15 local and international partner organisations.

Education

photo of few students in a classeroom

Enfants du Monde offers basic education to children and teenagers who have never had the opportunity to attend school or who left education early. Particular attention is given to girls’ education. 

Health

photo of medical consultation

Enfants du Monde is helping to save the lives of pregnant women and new born babies by organising health programmes to assist women, their families and medical staff.

Training

photo of a teacher and his students in a classroom

Enfants du Monde offers programmes for trainers and teachers to improve the quality of education provided.  It also offers continuous training for health workers.

Switzerland

photo of a volunteer of Enfants du Monde

Enfants du Monde offers awareness programmes to young people in Switzerland about the reality of life in disadvantaged countries.


To achieve tangible and permanent results, Enfants du Monde is working very closely with local partners and the Departments of Health and Education in the target countries, as well as universities and international organisations such as the World Health Organisation, UNICEF and the United Nations Population Fund.

 


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."

With 360 Swiss francs a year, that's one franc per day, you enable a child in Niger go to school for a year.
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