Angel More
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welcome to my blog!

My name is Angel More and I am 16 years old. I'm climbing mountains, biking, swimming open water, and doing triathlons to raise awareness for Children International. Children International is an organization that supports children in poverty and I want to raise money to $1 million for Children International’s HOPE scholarship fund—to support 5,000 teens around the world who want to further their education in high school, college, or technical school, so they can escape the cycle of poverty. Follow my blog for updates about my adventures and fundraising.

let's end poverty for children worldwide!

Angel's HOPE

Update on aconcagua Permit 

11/25/2014

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Hi,

I have been working on getting all the paperwork for Mt Aconcagua done. Since I am underage I need to go court and convince the Argentina Government to let me go up the mountain. They need authorization from my parents, to let me go up Mt Mt Aconcagua with notarization. A resume with all of the events I have swam(in the ocean), the events I have biked and mountains I have hiked. As well, I need my passport copies and the all the copies of the articles I am in. 

Thank you so much for donating and spreading awareness. 

Thanks,
Angel 
DONATE NOW
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A new video!

11/21/2014

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A newer version of my video is now available to watch (below)! It's the mini version, so please take a few minutes to check it out. Major Diamond Productions did a really amazing job. :) 
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What It's All For: Children International

11/11/2014

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Picture
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What It's All for: Ending Child Marriage

11/10/2014

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A Life Defined... But Not By Dowry

To read the full Children International article on its original site, please click the link here. 
For more information about Children International, please click here.

A Young Woman Proves She's No One's Property, Then Sets Out to Buy Her Own

A disturbing memory haunts 27-year-old Shanaz when she compares herself to other young women in her community. She pictures her cousin, just 16 years old. One moment her face is aglow with love. Then the young woman's expression changes from hope to horror as flames shoot out from a kerosene stove. Shanaz hears her cousin's final gasps of air as she helplessly attempts to flee the claustrophobic home that had been locked from the outside.

Breaking the Bamboo Ceiling
Shanaz gained control through sponsorship. It gave her the chance to get an education, a rare privilege for girls in her village. Rarer still was the support she received from her father, Abbas, a coconut vendor. "I took the opportunity of what the sponsorship program provided and let my daughter do and grow as much as she could," Abbas says.

Abbas' attitude was so unorthodox, even his wife disagreed with him. She insisted that Shanaz stop studying once she reached ninth grade, but Shanaz's father was behind her every step of the way. "People kept telling me, 'Marry her off, marry her off,'" he shares. "So I had to stand up for her and say, 'No! If she wants to study – whatever she wants – leave her alone! Let her do it.' This daughter of mine, after getting her job, has done all this," he adds, motioning to the family's expansive two-story brick house, the biggest in the area.

"If sponsorship wasn't there, I probably wouldn't have made it past eighth grade like my brothers and sisters," Shanaz concedes."


Assistance provided through sponsorship helped her finish secondary school, covered the costs of her first year of college and helped her get vocational training so she could work as a seamstress and a tutor. She used those skills to pay the rest of her way through college and then finish a master's degree in social work.

Today, Shanaz is a human resources assistant at a steel manufacturing company. She's using her income to radically improve her family's home and pay for her siblings' expenses. "What I have done," she says with a surge of pride, "making this house – forget women – there are many sons who haven't done this for their family!"

She knows what she wants, too. The minute Shanaz pays off the loan for her family's home renovations, she's going to get an MBA in hopes that she'll be promoted to H.R. manager.

"Initially, those who pointed a finger at me now tell their daughters that they should be like me," she boasts. "I'm very happy in my life, and I would like to give a heartfelt thanks to my sponsor.

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