
Street Children Outreach Programs
$250 of $20,000 raised
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Upcoming Youth Mental Health Conference

Notice: Test mode is enabled. While in test mode no live donations are processed.
Behind every young person living on the streets is a story that often goes unheard.
Every Week, through our Street Outreach and Rehabilitation Initiative, (SORI), our team provides nutritious meals, mentorship, community engagement activities, and basic medical support to vulnerable youth who often have nowhere else to turn.
Many of the street-connected children and youths in the outskirts of Korogocho, one of Nairobi’s largest informal settlements, have experienced poverty, family breakdown, neglect, substance abuse, violence, and circumstances beyond their control. Too often, they are seen only for their struggles rather than their potential.
Every week, we feed more than 300 street children and youths, creating a safe and welcoming space where they can be heard, supported, and encouraged.
We also organize monthly football tournaments, mentorship sessions and life-skills discussions that help them rediscover hope, purpose, and the possibility of a better future away from the Streets.
Today, it costs approximately $450 to provide a weekly feeding and outreach program for over 300 young people.
Your Support will help us increase the frequency of the outreach programs, expand access to basic healthcare and mentorship, and move closer to establishing a permanent rehabilitation and resource center.
Our aim is to reach over 5000 Street Children Annually
You can support this initiative through financial contributions, food donations, medical supplies, professional expertise, mentorship, counseling services, sports facilitation, or volunteering your time in the Streets.
Our long-term goal is to establish a dedicated Resource and Rehabilitation Centre where vulnerable youths can access comprehensive support, counseling, education, vocational training, life-skills development, and pathways back into society.
We envision a future where young people are not merely surviving on the streets but are empowered to thrive as productive members of their communities.
What counts in life is not the mere fact that we have lived. It is what difference we have made to the lives of others.– NELSON MANDELA
