article / June 3, 2025
Dreaming Beyond Barriers: Salwan’s Story
Salwan, a young man from Al Ba’aj, Ninewa, was left partially paralysed by a high fever at just eight months old. Raised with love and care by his father, Salwan faced severe bullying from peers and even teachers due to his disability. This led him to leave school early and struggle with self-worth. Displaced during the 2014 conflict, his family lived in camps before returning to a looted home. Despite hardships, Salwan gradually began to accept his condition and dream of a better future. In 2024, he joined World Vision Iraq’s Life Skills sessions through the Nexus Accelerator Fund Project. Initially shy, he found confidence and hope through discussions on bullying and self-development. Now 21, Salwan aspires to start his own business but is hindered by financial barriers. Still, he remains determined to rely on himself and live with dignity, inspired by his journey of growth, resilience, and newfound self-belief.
article / June 3, 2025
“I chose peace over comfort.” – Hayat’s Story
Hayat*, a 34-year-old mother of six from Mosul, was forced into marriage at 16 through an exchange arrangement that cut short her education and childhood. Transitioning from city life to a village, she endured a difficult marriage, family pressure, and poverty. After a suicide attempt, she resolved to change her life and built a mud house with her husband. Despite harsh conditions, she found peace.
Support from World Vision and caseworker Eileen provided both emotional and financial relief — allowing her to install plumbing and buy essentials like a water heater and oven. Through resilience and determination, Hayat began to rebuild her life and dignity. She sewed clothes during the 2014 conflict to support her children, who survived on minimal food.
Hayat regrets her early marriage and is determined to give her daughter a better future. “If a woman isn’t strong, she can’t survive,” she says. Her dream is to one day build a real home — and a life of lasting peac
article / May 22, 2025
A Life-Changing Gift: Jabirou’s Tricycle Story
Jabirou, an 18-year-old with a locomotor disability, gained mobility and dignity through a tricycle donated by World Vision Niger. Once forced to crawl, he now attends school and raises disability awareness in his community.
publication / May 21, 2025
Every Heart Second Quarter Newsletter FY25 - World Vision International Sierra Leone
Introducing the second quarter edition of the World Vision International Sierra Leone (WVISL) Every Heart Newsletter!
article / May 27, 2025
Monygau’s Story: How Mobility Support Is Opening Doors for Students with Disabilities in South Sudan
This story is about Monygau, a 17-year-old boy in South Sudan who has a disability called cerebral palsy. It explains how the EMPOWER project helped him and others get a tricycle to go to school by themselves. The story shows how this support makes life easier for him and his family. It also discusses the challenges children with disabilities face in schools and how South Sudan is working to include all children in education.
video / May 29, 2025
The Impact of Cash Aid: An Afghan Grandmother’s Story of Survival
“I have nothing – where should I get it [food] from?”
Drought has taken their crops. Inflation has made basic food unaffordable. But cash assistance is giving her a fighting chance.
Meet Kemia, a grandmother in rural Afghanistan, who is raising her orphaned grandchildren in the midst of a deepening humanitarian crisis.
Through World Vision Afghanistan's life-saving programme funded by the German Federal Foreign Office (GFFO), families like Kemia’s receive direct cash support to meet their most urgent needs. It allows them to buy food locally, pay for essentials, and make decisions with dignity.
“For me, cash assistance means survival,” Kemia says.
She is one of 23 million people in Afghanistan, half the population, who urgently need humanitarian assistance to survive this year.
Watch her story. Share her voice.
video / May 29, 2025
Mary: Empowering Women through Strength and Resilience
Mary: Empowering Women Through Strength and Resilience
article / May 26, 2025
DR Congo: Clean Water Transforms Eugénie’s Life
This article tells the story of Eugénie, a 29-year-old mother living in Gemena, Democratic Republic of Congo, whose life was transformed by access to clean water. Formerly burdened by the daily struggle to fetch unsafe water for her family, Eugénie faced health issues and time constraints that impacted her children and livelihood. The installation of a water kiosk by World Vision changed everything, bringing safe water close to home, improving her family’s health, and giving her the time and freedom to focus on other responsibilities. The article highlights not only Eugénie’s transformation but also the positive ripple effects clean water has had on her entire community.
publication / May 27, 2025
2024 Global Report on Child Participation in World Vision Decision-Making Processes
A report summarizing World Vision's efforts to listen to and include children's perspectives in organisational decision-making processes from local to national and international levels.
article / June 2, 2025
Clean Water is Changing the Lives of School Children and Families in Zambézia
A new borehole at Muiticula Primary now provides clean water to 400+ students, improving health, hygiene, and education through the PARES project.