$ AMOUNT
ORGANIZATION
AREA SERVED
PURPOSE breast cancer awareness • training equipment • paid tuition and travel expenses for two nurses to attend a training seminar • assist with expenses to organize a Pink Charity Run fundraiser
$4,545
Breast Cancer Welfare Assoc. of Malaysia East Malaysia
$3,000
The Borneo Project
Sarawak
$1,300
National Cancer Society, Malaysia
Provided free breast screening procedures West Malaysia to 29 low income women and assist with the organization's operational costs.
$1,000
Kadazan schools
Sabah
$500
Klang, Haemodialysis Assoc. of Klang Selangor
$500
World Wise Schools
Purchase small hydroelectric generators for a longhouse.
Purchased computers for rural schools.
USA
Assist with the purchase of equipment. Assist with a program to provide to American schoolchildren an understanding of the world's cultures.
USA
Assist in the funding of a documentary film on the preliminary training in Hawaii of Peace Corps Volunteers who went on to serve in Malaysia and other countries. Assist with the upgrade of NPCA membership software to help recruit more members.
$305
Sending Aloha Abroad
$300
National Peace Corps Association
USA
$278
Hospis Malaysia
Kuala Lumpur Assist with palliative care training.
$250
Heritage Foundation
Assist with the building of an example of a Kuala Lumpur headman's house at the Cultural Center.
$250
Doctors Without Borders
Haiti
The Borneo Project The Borneo Project
Assist with the cost of providing legal aid to East Malaysia East Malaysia's Indigenous population. Sarawak
$250 $250
Assist with earthquake relief efforts.
$150
Humana Child Aid Society, Sabah
Sabah
Purchased children's books written in the Penang language to help keep that cultural basis alive. Assist with the operational cost of a school for the children of Indonesian guestworkers.
USA
Co-sponsored a reading program in the US on International Children's Day featuring Malaysian children's folktales. Stories were read by more than 40 Returned Peace Corps Volunteers in more than 30 states reaching 3500 elementary school students. Children learned about Malaysian culture and Peace Corps experiences.
USA
FoM was contacted by a fourth grade teacher in New Hampshire who had a new student from Malaysia. The student spoke very little English so the teacher requested some children's books in the Malaysian language to ease the transition to learning English. FoM members were able to provide several books.
NON-CASH CONTRIBUTIONS