“Some children are born without a name in any system. No birth certificate. No right to go to school. Not even the right to exist openly. They didn’t choose to be born into war, but they’ve been running from bombs and gunfire for as long as they can remember.”
Though they have survived war, these children still live hidden in the shadows of the law. They are stateless children, without legal identity, safety, education, or a future. This is not a scene from a war film—it is the reality of thousands of children along the Thai Myanmar border who have been forgotten.
Fleeing the ongoing conflict in Myanmar, countless boys, girls, and mothers have crossed into Thailand illegally. While they may have escaped bullets, they now face another silent, deadly, and enduring war—the war of inequality in rights.
These children have no legal documents, no birth registration, and thus no access to the basic human rights that every child should have.
"For children born without identity, where does education stand? Is it still a right—or a distant hope waiting to be noticed?"
In a world that talks about AI, advanced learning, and global skills development, some children don’t even have a desk, a notebook, or a place in any classroom. Many grow up in refugee camps or remote hill tribe communities where it no longer matters whether they are “Thai” or “Burmese”—what matters is that they have no opportunity.
In a place with no safety net, Avoda Learning Center was established with a simple yet powerful mission: “To give every child the right to learn.”
But here, education is more than textbooks. Children at Avoda learn that they are seen. That they matter. That they are capable. That they have the right to dream as big as any other child.
They don’t just learn to pass exams—they learn to understand themselves, the world, and each other. They are encouraged to ask questions, solve problems, and express their thoughts in a safe environment. Some children who were once too shy to even say their names now speak confidently in classroom discussions.
One young girl shared: “Before I came here, I never believed someone like me had the right to be heard. But when my teacher said that every child has value, something changed. I started to believe it. I still need help, I still need support—but I want to keep learning. Because this place makes me feel like I’m truly human.”
Her words speak for many others—children still learning to stand, who need a hand to hold and someone who sees their worth. Education at Avoda isn’t just knowledge—it’s dignity, hope, and humanity restored.
Another girl from a hill community recalled being denied entry to a school simply because she had no ID card. “It felt like being exiled from the world. Like there was no place for me to exist.”
When she joined Avoda Learning Center, she was welcomed by her name—not by a document. No one asked for her nationality. No one branded her illegal. Here, children are not judged by their citizenship, ethnicity, or religion. Every child is seen as equally valuable and deserving of the right to education they should have had from the beginning.
Avoda is more than a school. It is a Safe Space for children who were once abandoned. Volunteer teachers share stories of children who were once aggressive, rude, or withdrawn—shaped by violence and neglect. But from the very first
day, when someone called them by name, gave them a hug, and spoke with kindness, something shifted.
“Because education isn’t just teaching—it’s healing the human soul.”
Avoda also provides transportation for children living in distant villages. Children who used to travel through forests and rivers daily—only to be turned away by public schools—now ride Avoda’s van with joy, knowing that today they will learn and simply live like a child should.
Avoda’s program doesn’t aim to replace the government. It fills the gap where the system still cannot reach. Because every child, no matter where they come from, deserves an equal start. True education is not just knowledge—it is the restoration of rights, hope, dignity, and a future. And none of this would be possible—without you.
Donate $10/month to support a child's education or transportation to school
Pray and share this mission with your friends or church community
Speak up for stateless children who are still unseen by society
Reach out today—so no child has to battle for their basic rights alone.
Be part of us in restoring rights to children who’ve been forgotten.
Avoda Learning Center
You’re not just giving. You’re walking with us.