5 Charities in Malaysia
Malaysia, located in Southeast Asia, is known for its high levels of income inequality compared to other countries in the region. A significant percentage of the population, precisely 40%, falls under the low-income bracket, with more than 5% of Malaysians currently living in absolute poverty. Fortunately, five charities in Malaysia assist the economically vulnerable population. These organizations offer a variety of support, such as scholarships and educational aid and build free homes in rural areas.
SOLS Foundation
The SOLS Foundation, formed in 2000, is a Malaysian organization that aims to help the bottom 40% of the population with low socioeconomic statuses by providing free education and employment support. SOLS initially began providing free English teaching. However, this organization has now grown to offer further support through digital skills and social empowerment programs. SOLS has contributed immensely to many communities around Malaysia by providing more than 800 scholarships to disadvantaged children and setting up more than 1000 community programs for the youth.
Hope Malaysia
Hope Malaysia is an “emerging civil society organization (CSO),” founded in 2016, that focuses on “empowering poverty-stricken remote and rural villages” in Malaysia. The charity has started many supportive projects, such as installing gravity water systems in more than eight remote villages and implementing sustainable farming methods, which has helped more than 250 families spanning 10 rural villages. Such projects have allowed many Malaysians access to more water and food security.
Dignity for Children Foundation
The Dignity for Children Foundation, founded in 1988, is a nongovernment organization that now provides “holistic care and education for urban poor children in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.” The organization is dedicated to providing quality education and a safe learning environment for disadvantaged children between the ages of 2 and 19 in urban Malaysia. The organization “is now a learning center for more than 2,300 children.”
Epic Homes
Epic Homes is a program that aims to bridge the urban and rural divide by constructing homes for underprivileged communities such as the Orang Asli indigenous people in Malaysia. The program was initiated in 2010. It has successfully built more than 175 homes around more than 10 villages, ultimately developing and strengthening sustainable rural communities.
MyKasih
Created in 2009, MyKasih is a nongovernmental foundation that effectively distributes food aid to impoverished students and families in Malaysia. The charity has distributed more than RM200 million ($52 million) worth of food to disadvantaged families and students nationwide, including those in Sabah and Sarawak. This foundation has also managed to provide education bursaries to up to 10,000 Malaysian children in more than 104 schools across the nation, as MyKasih goes by the philosophy that education can be “the best ticket out of poverty.”
With a wide income divide and many living in poverty, these five charities successfully provide sustainable changes and aid to disadvantaged and vulnerable people in Malaysia.
– Zaynab Yusuf
Photo: Pexels
