HelpAlliance projects

Bangalore - India
BREADS: Continuous Support for Street Children
Around 60 000 street children live in Bangalore, and this number rises daily. The employees of five centers try to give a future to these children, as well as child workers of the nearby silk factories. Since 2001 HelpAlliance has been financing various programs for the affected children. More»
Accra - Ghana
Kinder Paradise Ghana
Akwaaba – Welcome to Kinder Paradise Ghana. In 2006 HelpAlliance supported this project for the first time, the aims of which are to alleviate the misery of the street children of Accra. More»
Bao Lam - Vietnam
Family Help Project Bao Lam
Since January 2006, HelpAlliance has supported a Lufthansa Captain to improve living conditions for the children in Bao Lam. More»
Cape Town - South Africa
iThemba, Philippi - Learning for life in a township
Together with colleagues of the Lufthansa Call Center in Cape Town and the Lutheran priest Otto Kohlstock HelpAlliance is building an English teaching nursery school and thus try to offer better prospects to the children of the Cape Town township Philippi. More»
Hope e.V. - aid for Ethiopia and Malawi
Hope e.V. was founded in 1992 by a group of flight attendants who were so touched by the poverty and hardship suffered by the people of Ethiopia that they decided to actively support humanitarian projects in the country. More»
Khandwa and Indore - India
Indian Sponsorship Circle
In India children whose own families cannot look after them are sent to orphanages. Thanks to cash donations and sponsorships we can not only provide the children with food, clothing and medical care, but also help to give them a brighter future. More»
Abéni - Aid for Benin
Better educational opportunities for children and young people are the aim of the HelpAlliance initiative in Djougou in northern Benin. Children are looked after at the existing day centre, and the infrastructure is being further improved. More»
St. Louis - Senegal
A district helps itself
In a poor district on the Island of Saint Louis, the UNESCO World Heritage site in the north of Senegal, we support training courses and business start-ups for women and young people, infrastructure measures, coaching for deprived and handicapped children. There are also plans to set up a centre for children and young people. More»
Obizi, Nigeria
Obizi - schools and a hospital in Nigeria
The Obizi People Health Centre in Nigeria provides health care for the inhabitants of Obizi. HelpAlliance was able to finance much of the expansion of the centre. At present, we are also supporting a number of educational measures. More»
Pattaya - Thailand
A brighter future for street children and orphans
In Pattaya, Thailand, thousands of children are forced to work as prostitutes. Together with our partner Human Help Network, we finance the "Pattaya Orphanage", an open house for young people, where children are protected from the worst form of exploitation. More»
Lagos - Nigeria
Help for orphans in Nigeria
The association pays for the upkeep of an orphanage in Ota, and a school on the island of Iba, both of which are near Lagos, Nigeria. The association started renovating the Jamido Motherless Babies Home in 1996 after reading a newspaper report about it. More»
Family Singers - Children Help Children
For the most part, the association helps Rumanian children and young people. HelpAlliance finances aid transports in order to support facilities for street children, orphans and the handicapped. More»
Kaloleni and Kilifi - Kenya
From bush hospital to house of hope
The bush hospital near Mombasa provides medical care for about 400,000 local people. We are helping to fund the necessary renovation work and also supporting a school near the hospital. More»
Chennai - India
Tonga - Help for children in Chennai
Tonga-Südhilfe, a charitable organisation whose activities originally focused on the islands of Tonga, is now involved almost exclusively with restoring dilapidated kindergartens in the Indian city of Chennai (formerly Madras). The kindergartens - or anganwadis, as they are called - are an important refuge for slum children. More»
