High Cross Church holds an election each year to choose
a charity to sponsor. For the last 6 years we have been
sponsoring the Asian Students Christian Trust (ASCT).

ASCT was formed in February 1975 specifically
to provide care and education for deprived children in Asia. Initially, a
handful of children were supported in Hong Kong, Vietnam and the
Philippines then over the years, the children in Hong Kong and Vietnam were
provided for by their respective government organisations. This then
allowed ASCT to concentrate their support solely in the Philippines. Our
Director in the Philippines is Revd Craig Burrows, an Assemblies of God
minister, originally from Yorkshire, who has been working with ASCT in
Manila for the last 15 years.
Today ASCT operates in and around Manila with
three main programmes:
Mango Tree House. This
is our own purpose built Residential Home in Quezon City where up to 35
children aged from 5 to over 21 who have been orphaned, abandoned, abused or
neglected live with our 10 Filipino live-in staff. Here the children find
the love and care which could be found in any large family home in the UK.
They live 6 or 8 to a room in dormitories for Elementary Boys, High School
Boys and College Boys. Similar arrangements are made for the Girls. The
children are provided with all of their daily requirements together with
everything necessary for their education in local government run schools.
The staff include Social Workers, Teachers, House Parents in addition to
those who take care of the Cooking and Laundry.
Cashew Tree School. Here we
have our own purpose built Nursery and Pre-School for around 170 children
aged 4 to 6 years
whose
home is on, or around the edge of, the huge Payatas rubbish dump on the
outskirts of Manila. The rubbish dump is notorious mainly for being
a place of employment for up to 30,000 who sift through the rubbish
scavenging 7 days a week in order to be able to sell items from the dump
with which to provide food for tomorrow. Between £1 and £2 daily can be
earned by each scavenger including children as young as 3 or 4. It
is for
these families that Cashew Tree School was built in 1998 and was opened by
the British Ambassador to the Philippines in November that same year.
Children walk from their homes, often made out of scrap materials from the
dump, to Cashew where they eagerly learn how to write, identify colours,
letters and figures for the very first time. Living in such squalid
conditions they are also taught the importance of hygiene. It is
incredible that although living in such awful squalor, the children always
come to school spotlessly clean.
Grapevine Project. For those
children who live with their family, or in many cases within their extended
family, but could not afford to go to school, ASCT provide over 50 with a
monthly allowance to ensure they have the opportunity to study. Their
progress is monitored by our staff from Mango Tree House and if a child is
truant, the allowance is stopped until they return to school. Should they
decide that they do not want to go to school anymore, they then are
discharged from our care to make room for children who have the necessary
enthusiasm and desire to study.
In the decades since the work of ASCT was
started, we have watched the children, encouraged by Sponsors and Supporters
from all over the world, grow as they turn their lives around. Many have
graduated from High School, College or University and have become teachers,
social workers, nurses, drivers, policemen, shop and restaurant workers and
business men and women. We are justifiably proud of all of them.
Should you wish to find out more or make contact
with ASCT, or possibly even sponsor one of the children, please telephone
their office in Camberley on 01276-707633 or log on to
www.asct.org.uk