HONG KONG SAR -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 16 October 2025 - Embarking the 75th anniversary of World Vision
International, World Vision Hong Kong hosted World Vision Day on 11
October, 2025 (Saturday) at the Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups
Building in Quarry Bay. Themed "Light On, Hope Ahead", World Vision Day
featured sponsor sharing, thanksgiving ceremony, thematic talks and
booth games, which successfully showcased our global achievements
especially in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), and health and
nutrition. The event welcomed partners from almost 300 organisations and
units.
Centered around the theme "Light On, Hope Ahead", World Vision Day
highlighted how partners joined hands with World Vision to bring
transformation and new hope to vulnerable children and their
communities. The opening ceremony was officiated by Andrew Morley,
President and CEO of World Vision International, and Amy Fung, the Chief
Executive Officer of World Vision Hong Kong. Long-term sponsor Stephen
Chan and artists who have witnessed World Vision's work — Priscilla
Wong, Michelle Wai, director Benny Lau and his family, and music
producer Cedric Chan — attended and shared valuable reflections.
Stephen Chan engaged in a heartfelt conversation with Andrew Morley
about the tangible impact of the Child Sponsorship Programme, and the
passion and motivation behind World Vision's 75 years of work on global
poverty.
Andrew Morley reiterated that urgent humanitarian needs have rocketed
almost 10 times from 3 crises annually 15 years ago to 33 crises today,
but international humanitarian funding remains critically insufficient,
posing immense challenges for frontline relief efforts. He recalled he
met an 8-year-old girl, Esther, living between southern Kenya and the
border of northern Tanzania, whose parents sold her for marriage to an
old man in exchange for six cows because the family was starving. Being
abused by her husband, Esther escaped and failed. After a few attempts,
she went to World Vision's local office. Eventually she was adopted by
foster parents and enrolled into a local school — an outcome made
possible by the support of World Vision's child sponsorship programme.
Andrew Morley said he was impressed by her smile and the thankfulness in
her eyes.
As a child sponsor of 6 children, Andrew Morley said every donation had
the power to help vulnerable children like Esther transform their lives.
"If you think what you are doing isn't making any difference, just
remember Esther," he added. Andrew Morley also thanked Hong Kong people
and partners. "To everyone, corporate partners, schools, hospitals,
child sponsors, and to those who raise money for us, and those who pray
for us, for all of you I would like to say thank you," he said.
To honour their long-standing efforts in providing vital assistance and
igniting hope of vulnerable communities, certificates of appreciation
and plagues were presented to partners from nearly 300 organisations and
units, and commemorative pins were awarded to donors showing more than
20 years of support.
Kenny, a child sponsor supporting World Vision for 12 years, recalled
visiting his sponsored daughter in Bangladesh during a once‑in‑a‑century
cyclone. Despite the devastation and the clean-up at home, she insisted
on keeping their meeting, and Kenny felt deeply moved. "We often think
donating money for a child's education is the best option," he
reflected. "But if the community doesn't have a school, the child still
has no way to study even when there is adequate funding. It's something I
only came to understand after becoming a child sponsor."
During the event, a live band made up of students from Ma On Shan Tsung
Tsin Secondary School that participated in World Vision's "Joint
Secondary School Famine", performed two record hits - "Amani" and "We
Are One". The golden hit "Amani" was written by the well-known local
band
Beyond after joining World Vision's trip to Kenya in 1991, while
"We Are One" was the theme song created for "30-Hour Famine" by another
local band
RubberBand, following their visit to Zimbabwe. Both songs
conveyed messages of hope for world peace and solidarity. The event was
further uplifted when 24 children of Benji's Choir with speech
impairments performed "This Little Light of Mine", a song World Vision's
founder Dr. Bob Pierce taught children in Xiamen in 1947.
World Vision has been actively promoting the concept of legacy giving,
which enables donors to bring long-term change to the fragile
communities through early planning of personal assets. A seminar was
co-hosted with "ForeverGift.hk" on 3 Instruments of Peace on World
Vision Day, where a practicing lawyer explained the importance of making
a will and enduring power of attorney, as well as making advance
medical directives. Over 100 people attended the seminar.
Moreover, World Vision reaffirmed its commitment to serving the world's
most vulnerable children and communities and contributing to the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) via five priority areas: Water,
Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), Education, Health and nutrition,
Livelihoods, and Child Protection. Workshops at the event introduced
educators to these work towards SDGs, and interactive game booths
engaged the public on issues such as disaster relief and water
resources.
Brief history of World Vision International and World Vision Hong Kong
While on a trip to China in 1947, a young American reporter and American
Baptist minister, Dr Bob Pierce, met a poor girl named Baiyu (meaning
white jade) during a visit in Xiamen, who was expelled by her family as
she wanted to go to school. Pierce wanted to help this precious soul, so
he gave Ms Tena Hoelkedoer, a female missionary in Xiamen, all that he
had, which was just five dollars. Ms Tena used it to buy food and
clothes for Baiyu and send her to school. Afterwards, Pierce sent the
same amount each month after returning home so that she could continue
to look after Baiyu.
This encounter marked the turning point in Pierce's life. In 1950, he
founded World Vision, with the aim of helping poverty-stricken children
around the world. That five dollars set the prototype of the Child
Sponsorship Programme. The first Child Sponsorship Programme began a few
years later in response to the needs of hundreds of thousands of
orphans at the end of the Korean War in 1953. It was later extended to
other Asian countries, and places such as Latin America, Africa, Eastern
Europe and the Middle East.
In 1962, Typhoon Wanda hit Hong Kong severely. World Vision distributed
relief supplies in Hong Kong, and later set up its first field office in
the territory. With the economic recovery in Hong Kong, World Vision
Hong Kong turned itself into a fundraising office in 1982, supporting
the relief and development work of World Vision offices worldwide. World
Vision Hong Kong also promotes public education, raising public
awareness about global issues such as poverty, hunger, health and child
rights.