Volunteering at the Youth Charity Foundation, Thailand

Lone takes us for a visit to the YCF orphanage near Chiang Mai, where she volunteers on a regular basis. This is a facility that provides education and life skills to children who would otherwise have poor prospects.

This story is part of our Travel Writing and Reflection series.

For me, travel is all about experiences. Going places and immersing myself in a local community. I prefer local markets, small towns, and countryside villages when travelling. I like off the beaten track more than big cities.

Through a friend from Switzerland, I was introduced to the Youth Charity Foundation Orphanage (YCF) in Doi Saket in northern Thailand. She herself had lived in an orphanage till she was adopted by a German family. She was involved with YCF because she wanted to help kids get a better life, like she had been given. To understand more about YCF, please visit the website.

YCF isn’t a typical orphanage in the western sense. Instead of just taking in children without parents, it also has children whose families cannot afford to feed them, provide education or essentials, giving them a loving home and a real chance at a better future. They live, learn and grow under the care of the foundation. They have access to education, life skills, and values that prepare them for life beyond the foundation’s walls.

Students from the Youth Charity Foundation facility in Doi Saket, Thailand.
Having fun while learning the essential life skills they will need as adults in rural Thailand.

Life at YCF: Making Every Single Day Count

YCF was founded in 1996 with a mission to nurture children affected by poverty, broken families, substance issues or limited access to education, YCF operates several homes, including House of Hope and House of Grace, where children and young adults live and are enrolled in local schools that provide education.

Beyond books and classroom time, YCF places a big emphasis on practical skills. At YCF there is a pig farm, they plant rice and vegetables, and get eggs from their own chickens. This gives the children an appreciation of how and where food comes from. This is Thailand and living in the countryside you need to learn how to grow your own food. Life skills in south east Asia are vastly different from those in the western world.

The children at YCF are aged anything from toddler to their 20’s. Khun Tassnee, the founder, regards students as extended family, and some stay on well into their 20s, or until they are old enough to help their impoverished family back home. The ones who stay and finish secondary school have the option of going to Chiang Rai to university. There they live in dorms and come home to YCF during the weekends and holidays.

Students and volunteer at the Youth Charity Foundation (YCF) in Doi Saket, Thailand.
The author with some of her commerce students. Students are regarded as extended family so they always have a home with the Foundation. When they move on after university they often come ‘home’ for festivities and events. Many of them get married in the gardens there.
Students at the Youth Charity Foundation (YCF) in Doi Saket, Thailand.
Commerce students, aged 14 to 20. YCF gives them a decent shot at a professional career.

Volunteering

I go to visit them and help them with speaking English. They learn English at school but have little opportunity for practical application. So, spending a couple of hours with me means they have to speak and practise their English. I have taught them how to plan making products they can sell, and understand how they can make a profit. They all have various talents; some of them are really good at drawing so one year they designed Christmas cards, others coloured them and wrote Christmas messages. A group of them joined me to sell their products at a Christmas Fair I host every year in the Wualai silver district of Chiang Mai.

That first year the kids arrived shy and unsure, clutching boxes of Christmas cards, handmade bracelets, bookmarks, and raffle tickets they had a role in pricing and producing. What began with nervous glances soon turned into confidence. A couple of Thai baht exchanged hands, and those early wins lit something in them. Curiosity became confidence, and confidence turned into conversations with visitors from around Thailand and the world.

The children and I are working on a book about a pig called Moo Moo who falls in love with Laila, a lady pig who lives on the farm next door. The kids are in stiches when we talk about the escapades of Moo Moo and his love. They have drawn some images to be used in the book and are creating more so we have a full story to print. Then they get to sell the book at markets and fairs in and around Chiang Mai.

I am energised by all the kids there and their sheer enthusiasm for life.

Christmas cards made by the children at the Youth Charity Foundation (YCF) in Doi Saket, Thailand.
Christmas cards made by the children. Most people from the hill tribe areas are raised as Christians, while also celebrating Buddhist events.
Crafts made by the children at the Youth Charity Foundation orphanage in Doi Saket, Thailand.  For sale at the market in Chiang Mai.
Crafts are sold at local markets to raise money for the Foundation. Donations also welcome.

For another example of community support, see our article on the trek along the death march route on Sandakan. And for an account of the resilience of simple people in difficult circumstances, see the article on microbusinesses in Rajasthan.

One comment

  1. I absolutely loved this feel-good story about turning kids’ lives around and enhancing their opportunities. Someday I’d like to volunteer to teach English there. (I’m a qualified 16-year TESOL teacher.)
    Well written, Lone!

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