In need of that perfect Christmas gift for a loved one? Take a look our Special Gifts this Chirstmas and find some alternative gifts for the special people in your life, while also supporting the mothers and children of The GOD’S CHILD Project.
In need of that perfect Christmas gift for a loved one? Take a look our Special Gifts this Chirstmas and find some alternative gifts for the special people in your life, while also supporting the mothers and children of The GOD’S CHILD Project.
WASHINGTON– The GOD’S CHILD Project, a North Dakota-based nonprofit organization, is celebrating 20 years of domestic and international service with praise from the White House. President Barack Obama sent a letter congratulating the Project and its founder Patrick Atkinson for improving the lives of thousands of impoverished children and mothers in the United States, Guatemala, El Salvador, India, and Malawi, Africa.
“On this occasion, we are reminded of the abiding truth that each of us has the power to create a better world for ourselves and our children when we do God’s work here on earth,” President Obama wrote in the letter.
Atkinson, who grew up in North Dakota, founded The GOD’S CHILD Project in 1991 to educate and care for orphaned, abandoned, and impoverished children in Antigua, Guatemala. His original vision has since grown into 13 distinct programs dedicated to creating sustainable and permanent change in the lives of the world’s poorest people.
“When I started GOD’S CHILD, I never could have imagined the international social movement that the Project would become,” Atkinson said.
More than 5,000 children and nearly 8,700 mothers and their dependents receive services from The GOD’S CHILD Project. The organization’s holistic approach to breaking the generational poverty cycle includes free education, health and dental care, psychological care, legal representation, food and clothing donations, and housing. GOD’S CHILD also combats human trafficking, childhood malnutrition, gang violence, and homelessness in some of the world’s most vulnerable communities.
“It is an honor to receive praise from the White House for the work The GOD’S CHILD Project has quietly been doing for two decades,” Atkinson said. “While it is humbling to know that the President is familiar with our work, that is not why we serve the poor. We work hard every day simply because every person on earth deserves the same basic human rights: education, food, shelter, and dignity.”
WASHINGTON– The GOD’S CHILD Project, a North Dakota-based nonprofit organization, is celebrating 20 years of domestic and international service with praise from various government entities. U.S. Senators John Hoeven and Kent Conrad, both of North Dakota, co-sponsored a resolution praising the Project and its founder Patrick Atkinson for improving the lives of thousands of impoverished children and mothers in the United States, Guatemala, El Salvador, India, and Malawi, Africa.
Atkinson, who grew up in North Dakota, founded The GOD’S CHILD Project in 1991 to educate and care for orphaned, abandoned, and impoverished children in Antigua, Guatemala. His original vision has since grown into 13 distinct programs dedicated to creating sustainable and permanent change in the lives of the world’s poorest people.
“When I started GOD’S CHILD, I never could have imagined the international social movement that the Project would become,” Atkinson said.
More than 5,000 children and nearly 8,700 mothers and their dependents receive services from The GOD’S CHILD Project. The organization’s holistic approach to breaking the generational poverty cycle includes free education, health and dental care, psychological care, legal representation, food and clothing donations, and housing. GOD’S CHILD also combats human trafficking, childhood malnutrition, gang violence, and homelessness in some of the world’s most vulnerable communities.
“We commend God’s Child for its two decades of compassion and support for the less fortunate, especially the thousands of orphaned and abandoned children around the world. Patrick and all the volunteers with God’s Child are empowering children, helping them escape the bonds of poverty,” Senators Conrad and Hoeven said in a joint statement.
GOD’S CHILD also received congratulations for two decades of work in a resolution from the State of North Dakota and a proclamation by Bismarck Mayor John Warford.