We seek out and help those who are out there doing the heavy lifting and support them in their mission to make a difference in people’s lives. Learn more about the missions we support and how you can be a mission supporter too!

Indigenous Communities in Columbia

We make three day trips to indigenous communities, providing them with clothes, food, and books. These areas have no electricity, there’s no running water or drinkable water. 

We have activities for the kids, the youth, and provide basic legal help to the indigenous community, and MDs and nurses volunteer their time to travel and help these communities with basic health concerns.

We seek to provide these communities with resources they have no access to, like warm clothes, and books.

All of this is thanks to donations. If you want to volunteer for this mission, contact us.

Poor Communities in Tijuana

The landfill of Tijuana is privately owned, and the pickers can only sell what they get to the owner of the dump for a very small fee. They are not allowed to sell elsewhere.

We take food to the people of the poorest communities in Tijuana. 

Valle las Palmas is a community of people living in dire poverty. 

Every day around 1,000 people, amongst Tijuana’s poorest, work in the landfills for food, clothes and anything they could sell. They find salvageable items for resale in the city dump and live without running water or electricity on a daily basis. Pickers scavenge the dump for more than 12 hours in hopes of earning somewhere between $5 and $20. 

They are only allowed to sell what recyclables they get to the owner of the dump for a very small fee, about 50% of the normal price outside the landfill.

Next to the Tijuana landfill, is Tent City. There, more than 400 families live in houses poorly made of wood, plastic, or cardboard. Kids play amongst the trash, and the people feed off the trash. 

 They find salvageable items for resale in the city dump and live without running water or electricity on a daily basis. Pickers scavenge the dump for more than 12 hours in hopes of earning somewhere between $5 and $20. They are only allowed to sell what recyclables they get to the owner of the dump for a very small fee, about 50% of the normal price outside the landfill.

Next to the Tijuana landfill, is Tent City. There, more than 400 families live in houses poorly made of wood, plastic, or cardboard while kids play amongst the trash, and the people feed off the trash. 

This mission needs financial donations, food and clothes.

Want to volunteer for this mission? Contact us.

Old People’s Home in Tijuana

Agnes Lester is a retirement home that shelthers 20+ seniors that have been neglected, abandoned or suffer chronic or degenerative diseases.

Volunteers provide the warmth of a home, medical and personal care, daily activities, and food to the seniors.

Agnes Lester accepts donations for clothes, blankets, and cleaning supplies. 

All of this is thanks to donations. If you want to volunteer for this mission, contact us.

Be an active supporter of those people who have their feet on the ground doing the difficult hands-on work that it takes to make a difference in peoples lives and help those in extreme poverty.