WOTW humanitarian partners are committed to helping women through providing:
Rescue and rehabilitation to those captive by traffickers
Quality education for high risk children and women
Safe places for rejected and vulnerable women and children
Empowerment through scholarships, job skill training, and networking
All of our Humanitarian Global Partners also facilitate women's empowerment programs through their various organizations.

LIGHT, LIFE, FREEDOM
New Delhi, India. Jyoti and Pradeep are the Directors of Light Life Freedom in New Delhi, India. Light Life Freedom is an organization that rescues children from sex trafficking in New Delhi, India. This organization provides food, housing, clothing, and education for these children in a healthy, nurturing environment. Due to the complexities of these children’s lives, there are many court battles that ensue between Light Life Freedom and the pimps who call these children their own. Jyoti and Pradeep are constantly in a very dangerous situations. As Indian Attorneys, this couple also provides free legal counsel to Christians experiencing persecution throughout the region. Many are released from jail due to Jyoti and Pradeep’s persistent and dynamic legal defense.

Jan Pragati - Mekhi's House
India. JanPragati is a group of young professionals from Lucknow, India who have a burden for the children of that most people look at as throwaways. It nurtures immeasurably precious children! They have a unique passion. In 2011, this organization was formed by Nitin and Blessy Sam, a couple who’s hearts were burdened with love for the disadvantaged in this area.
JanPragati serves the poor of India by providing free education for slum children, supports pro-life initiatives throughout Northern India, has a home for unwed mothers called “Mekhi House,” provides prenatal care for pregnant women in the slums, and sponsors empowerment centers for skill training and education for high risk women.
JanPragati serves the poor of India by providing free education for slum children, supports pro-life initiatives throughout Northern India, has a home for unwed mothers called “Mekhi House,” provides prenatal care for pregnant women in the slums, and sponsors empowerment centers for skill training and education for high risk women.

Nav Prabha
Lucknow, India. Nav Prabha is a new organization led by Ashraye David; the name means “New Radiance or Fresh Light” in the Hindi language. The goal of this humanitarian organization is to bring a fresh light of hope into the slums of Lucknow by empowering children through a quality education. For over a decade, Ashraye David served as a leader for the Jan Pragati organization which has developed a wide variety of humanitarian works throughout that region. Now, Nav Prabha will specialize in the education of high risk children in the slums of Lucknow. Currently, Nav Prabha has three school sites in this metroplex of over 4 million people!

House of Hope
India. House of Hope is a boys home located in a village in central Madhya Pradesh (MP), India. This home provides food, clothing, education, and shelter to young boys who have been orphaned or come from difficult circumstances. This organization is located in a rural part of the country and is home to many indigenous people groups. Moses and Sara Rao are the Directors of this boys home.

Living Hope Children's Home and Living Hope Human Trafficking Rescue and Rehabilitation Center
Nepal. Samuel and Kiran Dahal oversee Living Hope Children’s home; a place that rescues, heals, nurtures, and provides a family environment for children abandoned or rescued from trafficking. Some of these children are rescued during the leaders’ humanitarian efforts in the villages and cities of Nepal. The hope is to find healthy, stable families that desire to adopt these children. WOTW nurtures this organization by providing financial resources for the children’s living expenses and education. The Living Hope Children’s Home is located in a brand new facility in Kathmandu that WOTW helped to finance.
In addition to the Living Hope Children’s Home in Kathmandu, Living Hope has a Human Trafficking Rescue and Rehabilitation Center in a village in western Nepal, right on the border between Nepal and India. This location is a highway for trafficking. The Directors of this rescue center have trained a team that work with the local police to rescue young girls, boys, men and women from human trafficking. After the initial rescue, they provide rehabilitation and then reestablished them in a safe location or return them to their families.
In addition to the Living Hope Children’s Home in Kathmandu, Living Hope has a Human Trafficking Rescue and Rehabilitation Center in a village in western Nepal, right on the border between Nepal and India. This location is a highway for trafficking. The Directors of this rescue center have trained a team that work with the local police to rescue young girls, boys, men and women from human trafficking. After the initial rescue, they provide rehabilitation and then reestablished them in a safe location or return them to their families.

Treasured
Sri Lanka. Vanessa Perera started this organization for children, teens and adults with special needs and/or who are medically fragile. In her Sri Lankan culture and many other Asian cultures, children with disabilities are viewed as cursed and unwanted. Further, the mother is blamed for the disability and generally is treated as an outcast. Typically, the mothers are left alone with their disabled children, unable to work since there is no care for their children available. They are impoverished and rejected. The Lord laid upon Vanessa's heart to begin a ministry through her church just for these very special treasures!
The aim is to empower every Treasure to reach their full potential and become everything that God has created them to be, to support families and to provide opportunities for treasures and their families to be integrated and included in their church community as valued contributors and active participants. Our teaching premises are designed to cater to physical, sensory, learning and spiritual needs. We accept Treasures of all ages and abilities.
Vanessa has also begun Treasured Centre of Learning: A holistic teaching programme for persons with special needs from infancy to adulthood. Weekly programmes are conducted according to age groups. We support learners of all abilities, through the provision of tailored education, therapy, life skills and community integration.
The aim is to empower every Treasure to reach their full potential and become everything that God has created them to be, to support families and to provide opportunities for treasures and their families to be integrated and included in their church community as valued contributors and active participants. Our teaching premises are designed to cater to physical, sensory, learning and spiritual needs. We accept Treasures of all ages and abilities.
Vanessa has also begun Treasured Centre of Learning: A holistic teaching programme for persons with special needs from infancy to adulthood. Weekly programmes are conducted according to age groups. We support learners of all abilities, through the provision of tailored education, therapy, life skills and community integration.

Ewangan Hope Initiative
Tanzania, Africa. Ewangan Hope Initiative is a scholarship program and new partnership that was birthed from a divine encounter when our founders visited Africa. WOTW partners with Ewangan and organization founder, Sammy Barare, by providing scholarships for Maasai girls in elementary school through college/university. The Maasai girls apply for scholarships that provide private schooling and lodging; these scholarships are awarded based upon academic excellence and need. WOTW also supports an event for the spiritual, emotional, and mental nurturance of the Maasai youth every year. Ewangan means "light" in Maasai!

Women Literacy & Awareness Initiative
Nepal. The Women’s Literacy and Awareness Initiative is founded and led by Aasha Dahal Mendies. This organization was born out Aasha’s visits to Nepal’s rural villages where she witnessed women living without dignity, voice, or opportunity. Due to the view on women in these regions, girl babies are mourned, learning is discouraged, illiteracy is widespread, polygamy is common, and domestic violence is an epidemic. As a result of this tremendous need, the Women’s Literacy and Awareness Initiative was founded with the goal to empower women through literacy and awareness. This way women can live with dignity, confidence and purpose. Multiple centers throughout the villages of Nepal are being established for classes teaching basic education, five days a week, three hours a days, for two years. Although many of these women carry deep emotional pain, the goal of this program is to bring them healing, hope, encouragement, and opportunities. The central belief is that as women are educated, they will become aware of their worth and value. This change will not only affect them, but also their children and families; because when a mother learns, the whole family benefits.
