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Nabijubi Sheilla - Sponsor Now


Nabijubi Sheilla

Place Happy Times Childcare Initiatives

Project Child Sponsorship Program

Age 9

Name Nabijubi Sheilla

Nickname Sheilla

Gender Girl

Orphan Status Total Orphan

Type of Student Resident Orphan Student

Grade Primary Two

Language Luganda

My Story Sheilla was given to a motorcyclist who was to take her to a certain location. The woman who gave the child to the driver said the child would be able to identify the location, but when he arrived, Sheilla was unable to tell the driver where she was to go. The police tried to locate family but were unable to.

Additional Information Sheilla is calm and reserved.

 

 

 

When you sponsor a child for $35 each month through A New Song International, you provide tangible solutions to these children’s most pressing needs such as clean water, food, shelter, care, and an education as well as an opportunity for these children to be discipled to be followers of Jesus Christ. Sponsorship through A New Song International restores hope in each sponsored child’s life as they come to understand the love of Christ and that someone not only sees them but loves them enough to provide for their most basic needs.

 

Orphan Status Explanation

The word "orphan" has been used differently by various organizations. Our definition has taken the biblical truth of what it means to be an orphan or fatherless into account along with the most prevalent definitions used by organizations like UNICEF and Christian Alliance for Orphans to accurately convey each child's circumstances as accurately as possible.

Orphan Status Definitions

Single Orphan - One parent has died.

Double Orphan - Both mother and father have died.

Total Orphan - Status of parents unknown. Child was abandoned and has no known family.

Social Orphan - A child whose mother and father cannot care for him or her due to mental illness, poverty, or any other reason.

Please Note: As defined by ANSI, a child is not considered to be an orphan of he or she is in the care of one parent and the other parent has not died. Children of single mothers or single fathers are not considered to be orphans.