Just Like My Child Foundation

Just Like My Child Foundation (JLMC) is a San Diego-based 501(c)3 organization that works with women and children in rural Uganda and Senegal, with the goal of creating healthy, self-sustaining families who prosper without further aid. Its holistic system encompasses health care, education, women's rights, and economic development in the developing world. The foundation subscribes to a philosophy called deep development focusing on one local area or cluster of villages while addressing critical issues simultaneously.

Vivian Glyck founded Just Like My Child Foundation in 2006.

Overview

The Just Like My Child Foundation is an organization that employs an outreach approach, using a strategy of alliances with existing indigenous organizations and facilities that have a respected and broad reach into large populations. To ensure sustainable change, the foundation works directly with leaders in the community to enhance leadership capacity and motivate citizens towards self-reliance and empowerment that will sustain the community into the future without further aid.

Just Like My Child Foundation subscribes to a philosophy the organization calls Deep Development, focusing on a specific local area or a cluster of rural villages while addressing critical issues simultaneously, such as disease, inadequate education, poor infrastructure, women’s and girl’s empowerment, and lack of economic development. With the goal of encouraging microenterprise and education to further assist rural villages within the community and addressing issues of justice and women and children empowerment.

Since 2006, JLMC and its first indigenous and primary healthcare partner, Bishop Caesar Asili Memorial Health Centre in Central Uganda serves 48 villages and 600,000 people, specifically in the rural, three-district region of Luwero, Nakaseke, and Nakasongola. Just Like My Child has funded six schools in various Central Ugandan districts, such as Luwero and Nakaseke.

History

Vivian Glyck founded the Just Like My Child Foundation in July 2006 after a trip to Africa in May 2006 where she met Sister Ernestine Akulu.[1] Upon arriving home she decided she wanted to help the women and children of East Africa. Glyck asked Sister Ernestine of the Bishop Asili Hospital in Luwero, Uganda how she could help. Sister Ernestine requested a generator for the hospital and a CD-4 count analyzer machine. Since late 2006, Glyck raised $30,000 to acquire a generator for the Asili Hospital, which has ensured doctors continuous electricity, refrigeration for medicine, and stability for patients as well as secured assistance from the Clinton Foundation that made the CD-4 analyzer a reality for Asili Hospital thus HIV+ patients, especially pregnant mothers and children have a much easier access to anti retroviral treatment. Just Like My Child created a scholarship program in the village of Kikoirro, Uganda to send a child named Nyangoma Rachel to one of the best boarding school in Uganda.[2]

In October 2009, JLMC's first school, The Children’s Academy for the Collective Heart opened with support from Debbie Ford's Collective Heart Foundation, Cynthia Kersey’s Unstoppable Foundation and the Mark Victor Hansen Foundation and serves nearly 400 children.

Programs

Just Like My Child supports through sustainable development – what they call “giving a hand up, never a hand out.” JLMC supports a broad variety of international development solutions through projects focused specifically on assisting developing countries and is structured around the following six programs:

Supporters

References

External links

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