Tuesday, July 21, 2009

postheadericon The Sadako Trust, Educating Vulnerable Children In And Around Muzaffarabad

In October 2005 around 79,000 people were killed and more than 128,000 were injured by a major earthquake in the North West Frontier Province and Pakistan Administered Kashmir (PAK). Several million people were left homeless by the quake. The Sadako Foundation was set up to help affected children.

ANT-Hiroshima

2 comments:

Unknown said...

An interesting read! Thanks to all the members of ANT Hiroshima from HEED Associatiion (www.heed-association.org)

Regards

Mubashir (Chief Organiser)

ANT-Hiroshima said...

Thank you for your feedback, Mubashir, and for pointing us to your website, HeedAssociation.org.

Best wishes,

Tomoko Watanabe

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What is ANT-Hiroshima?

Asian Network of Trust-Hiroshima, an NGO based in Hiroshima, Japan, draws its inspiration from the experience of the A-bomb survivors who, together with international support, worked to rebuild their shattered city in a spirit of peace and reconciliation. In a similar spirit, ANT-Hiroshima is involved in a range of relief, reconstruction, and peace-building projects in a number of countries, including Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh.

ANT-Hiroshima’s work is rooted in the twin missions of providing material, as well as emotional, support to the people we serve. We bring a human touch to the provision of emergency relief in areas devastated by natural disaster or human conflict. Operating on a small scale at the local level, we share a spirit of warmth and compassion along with such immediate material needs as food, clothing, water, shelter, and medical supplies and services.

In Japan, too, our work is inspired by the spirit of Hiroshima in our efforts to motivate the next generation of Japanese to view the world with compassionate eyes. Through programs in education, we strive to stimulate the awareness and action of young people towards both the material and emotional needs of their local communities as well as the international community.

Tomoko Watanabe,
Founder and Executive Director,
ANT-Hiroshima

Green Legacy Hiroshima

Green Legacy