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Honduras is the poorest country in Central America. The unemployment rate is nearly 30%, AIDS is a major threat, and the educational system is poor. Nearly 50% of the 7 million people in Honduras are under the age of 20 and the average first pregnancy for a female is 15.3 years of age. According to Unicef statistics, there are 180,000 children in Honduras who are orphaned or abandoned.

Many of these children end up in government-run homes where there are few adult workers to care for them, and where the government lacks the funds to provide for the most basic needs of the children.

The goal of Give Hope 2 Kids is to provide a home for as many of these children as we can. In December of 2007, the ministry purchased 100 acres of property in Urraco, Honduras. We are calling the home Casa de Esperanza, which means House of Hope in English.

We are building family-style homes on the property, which will house about 8-10 children with a couple or an “aunt” to care for them. Through these family-style homes, we intend to teach children how to interact in a relatively normal family setting. In their family groups, the children will have “brothers” and “sisters,” chores, discipline, and most importantly, individual love. We hope to see them grow to have successful families of their own, without repeating cycles of dysfunction.

Our plan for kids is to give them a permanent home and a genuine chance to create a successful future. We intend to take in younger children in order for this to be possible, before the damage of abuse and pain steals their malleability. When they are young they have greater hope of working through their pain, getting a good education, and learning good family skills for their future life.

With the large piece of land we’ve purchased, we can be partially self-sustaining, providing much of our food from the land. The property now has orange and coco groves, a couple acres of coffee, and many other fruit trees. We are going to plant more fruit trees, more coffee, vegetable gardens, and mahogany trees.

We also believe that a country life will be beneficial for these children. They will learn a good work ethic as they help with chores and there will be lots of room to run, play, and swim. We hope to build a refuge where children feel safe from past hurt.

For updates about our progress with Casa de Esperanza, please visit our blog.

For more information about the condition of vulnerable children throughout the world, please visit www.unicef.org. For more information about Honduras, check out http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/honduras.html.