Nepal

Nepal

Uganda

Uganda

LITERACY IN LAOS

LITERACY IN LAOS

Haiti

Haiti

Bonfil Orphanage

Bonfil OrphanageJust outside Cancun, Mexico, there is a small orphanage called "Casa Hogar Esperanza".  This "House of Hope and Faith" is run by Asencio and Esther Mancilla who started this home nearly 20 years ago when someone left an infant on their doorstep.

Back to School

Back to SchoolInspired by Jeff Scott, our Cambodian Back to school program was able to expand to become a resounding success. 120 children are now in school, families are becoming self-sustaining, and we were lucky enough to facilitate it.

Loscarasucias Children's Home

Loscarasucias Children's HomeGlobal Colors board member Joy Haynes went to Argentina and while there decided to do a little Guerrilla Aid.   In a short amount of time she met every immediate need of a children's home outside of Buenos Aires.

Women Fuelwood Carriers

Women Fuelwood CarriersJust outside of Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia, there are women who hike roughly 18 miles a day collecting wood to be sold in the market. The weight of the packs they carry can be up to 70 lbs. - close to the weight of some of the women - and they do it all for about $2.

Development in Gardening

Development in GardeningWe partnered with an amazing organization, Development in Gardening (DIG), to create vegetable gardens next to hospitals in Africa.We worked at Hospital Fann in Dakar, Senegal, and created something so unique it brought First Lady Laura Bush to visit.

Cows for the Maasai

Cows for the Maasai After the September 11 attacks, the very poor people of the Maasai banded together and raised enough money to buy fourteen cows - their most prized possession -to give as a gift to America to help us heal.  We decided to go over and thank them by repaying the gesture...

Jeff Scott

Jeff Scott We were contacted by the friends and family of Jeff Scott to see if we could do any sort of project in his memory, and so we set out to get to know the man Jeff had become, and create a project work in his honor.

CAA Envirotrade

CAA EnvirotradeCreative Artists Agency (CAA) selected Global Colors to launch their International Volunteer Vacation Program, having us take CAA employees to Mozambique and South Africa for a reforestation and outreach project.

UCLA at Angkor Thom

UCLA at Angkor ThomWhile in Cambodia in 2005, we met a group of children being taken care of by the monks near Temple Bayon in Angkor Thom just north of Siem Reap, and they eventually became the inspiration to start Global Colors.  It was only fitting that our first project was to go back and thank them.



UCLA at Angkor Thom
While in Cambodia in 2005, we met a group of orphans we became very attached to, and they eventually became the inspiration for Global Colors.  It was only fitting that our first project was to go back to thank them

 

These amazing kids are the reason Global Colors came into existence.

 

 

Some were orphans, some from families too poor to raise them, and some were there just to learn from the monks. They were playing near an ancient temple and when they saw us they waved us over. We started playing and dancing around with them, and their laughter was infectious as they were probably wondering what on earth these crazy Americans were doing jumping around with them.

cambodiagroup.jpgFor some reason, when I got home these kids and their existence really played on my mind - eventually becoming the inspiration for starting this little organization, GlobalColors.

It was around the time Global Colors was up and running when I met Ric Coy from the UCLA Athletic Department. I told him about Cambodia.  He believed in our objectives, and arranged for UCLA to sponsor our first project – allowing us to return to give these children a few trivial items; but more importantly, to let them know that they were remembered.

So, we went back. My stomach had been in knots for days wondering if I could find them, if they were still there, or if they’d even remember me... Well, they were there – and they did.

I walked down through their village with a picture taken the previous trip, and was greeted by the monks - who told me a couple of the boys had changed villages, and the others were at school. My heart slowed down a bit, and as I turned to leave saying I’d come back, a monk pointed and said, “Look! See! They are coming!” I looked up to see one of the boys, then another, until all the rest came down the path.

RicTeaching.jpgMy heart started racing as they arrived and just looked up at me. I pulled out the picture and they started pointing to themselves, remembering the spot we took it. I spoke with them through one of the monks, telling them what they meant for me, how they changed me, and that I had a few things for them.

As we looked around their huts, they had no toys whatsoever. Nothing. So when we pulled out large bags full of soccer balls, footballs, UCLA Soccer Camp and Global Colors T-shirts - they went crazy! It was AMAZING! They started bouncing the balls, and then to watch them just play with these things was beyond fantastic.

We went back every day, took them school supplies donated by UCLA, taught them the ABC’s and how to spell their names in English, and gave instruction to the monks on how to carry on a basic educational program.

In addition, we also took a donation of toys, medical supplies, and clothes collected through Global Colors to Jayavarman VII Children’s Hospital. This is a free hospital for children in Cambodia sponsored by foreign governments, and while we were there, we gave blood. In Cambodia they are in desperate need of help combating a flu-like disease where the children need a blood transfusion to prevent death.  So it was the least we could do.  (I recommend anyone traveling to a third world country to check the local hospitals to see if they need a blood or plasma donation).

JurethHug.jpgBy the end of the trip our Khmer was about as good as their English, but we seemed to understand each other. It was an emotional trip most of the time, for this whole experience meant so much on so many different levels - but it was near the end of the trip when Ric and I lost it…

We were all just goofing around, and they looked at Ric and me and said “Mit Piet” (friend), then one of them looks up at us, points to himself and says, “Bhon (buh-own)" (little brother).  We had to look away as tears filled our eyes when we realized we really had made a difference - both of us overwhelmed at the difference they had made to us.

As the trip was winding down I don’t think we could have said “Mit Piet, Bhon Bhon" (little brothers), or hearing them say “Mit Piet” or “Bhan” (big brother), more.  Ric and I shed quite a lot of tears and hugged them all goodbye.

To actually emotionally connect, and to watch Ric (who had no idea what he was getting in to) as the experience changed his life forever – solidified in my mind that this is what Global Colors is to be about. An organization that can provide access to intense/hands-on volunteer work where anyone can figure out what they want to do, where they want to go, and we’ll help get them there. This work is too important to not try to help others accomplish similar goals.

It was absolutely one of the greatest, if not THE greatest experience of my life, and I wouldn’t trade it for anything in the world, because it was a culmination of much thought and preparation, and was the beginning of fulfilling my dream.

Many thanks to Ric Coy and UCLA for making this project possible.

So… now it is up to you. This was the first of my many projects, but what about you? Where are you going to go? How will you help? It’s time for you to decide.

Search, find your cause, change the world…

 

Gallery

 
This project contains one gallery with 14 images -- click on the image to view that gallery.
 

Join Us!

Follow our journey through email updates and newsletters!


Receive HTML?

Subscribe to our mailing list


Featured Project

52 Weeks
to change the world

featured_project_52-weeks_up.jpg

Follow along as we circumnavigate the globe creating grassroots aid.

buy_the_bead_v2.gif  

Media

video_wall.jpg Video Wall
From various projects  
media-module-photos.jpg Photo Galleries
our collection of images from around the world

Our Mission

We work to create self-sustaining grassroots projects for the common good of each community we serve.

Just go somewhere  and do something, and then teach others how to do the same.

Global Colors is a registered 501(c)3 non-profit organization
Copyright © 2012 Global Colors. E-Powered by John Hunter Productions