Please join our team today and help restore sight
When we first met nine-year-old Eric we found a sad little boy whose hopes were simple. All he wanted was to play football with his brother and to go to school. But the local school couldn’t teach a blind child, so he spent long days sitting by his mother, Clementine, while she worked. Clementine is a farm labourer, but with Eric at her side she could only take on work that was close to home. She could barely earn enough to feed her two sons. Many children like Eric live in extreme poverty. They often live a very lonely life, with little hope of ever going to school or enjoying the freedom of childhood. When you help restore sight to someone like Eric, you open up their whole future. Clementine was desperate to help her son, but their village is hours from the nearest hospital. There was no way they could afford the trip to the hospital or the surgery he urgently needed. Without outreach programs like the ones run by The Fred Hollows Foundation, finding help would have been very difficult. But a community health worker visited the area where Eric lives, and contacted Dr Ciku Mathenge. Dr Ciku (Wanjiku) Mathenge was the first female ophthalmologist in Africa and was trained by The Foundation. She has transformed the lives of countless people. Eric had very small eyes, and abnormal eye movements which meant that the connection between his eyes and his brain may not have developed. There was a risk that Eric wouldn’t’ be able to see, even with surgery. The surgery was nerve-wracking, but when Eric's patches were removed the next morning, he immediately reached out for Dr Ciku’s hand and smiled at his mother. That was the moment everyone realised he'd be okay. All Eric hoped for was to play football and go to school. And now he can, this is the difference you can make.
You can help to restore sight to more people like Eric. Will you make a donation today?
Dr Ciku is someone you would trust to do the most important thing: operate on your child. Eric’s mum trusted her when everyone else told her there was no hope for her son. As the first female ophthalmologist to be trained by The Foundation in Kenya, Dr Ciku has performed eye surgery on the most vulnerable children. She is a testament to Fred Hollows and the support of everyday Australians like you.
Monthly donations are the most effective way to give. You are always in control of your donation and you decide how long you give for and how much. It’s a convenient and secure way many of our committed donors change lives everyday.
For just $25 a month you could help provide sight saving surgery to a person every month. That’s up to 12 lives changed by you, every year.
Your $35 a month can help fund a mobile eye camp in the most remote areas. These camps can provide hundreds of surgeries in a day to people who can’t normally access these services.
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Clementine was just one of those people facing this scenario: she was desperate to help her son, but the village where they live is hours from the nearest hospital. Travelling is really not an option for people in her situation.
Without outreach programs like the ones run by The Fred Hollows Foundation, finding help would have been very difficult. But a community health worker visited the area where Eric lives, and contacted Dr Ciku Mathenge, a leading eye surgeon who has restored sight to thousands of people
Your $45 a month could help train an eye surgeon – one eye surgeon can perform up to 1,000 surgeries a year. We are planning on training 67 surgeons this year but we can’t do it without people like you.
Even though Fred was diagnosed with cancer, he made a promise to train 300 eye surgeons in Vietnam. He checked himself out of hospital and kept that promise. Watch the video to see the impact Fred has made in Vietnam.
One eye surgeon can perform up to 1,000 sight saving operations per year. Will you help by training an eye surgeon today?