Crossroads Foundation Annual Report 2013 - 2014

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ANNUAL REPORT 2013 - 2014


Contents Thank you 3

Gender equality 28-29

Can Crossroads help you?

Logos: telling a story

4-5

Digital divide 30-31

Sponsors 68-83

Snapshot 6-7

Disabilities 32-33

Where Crossroads worked: 2013-14

Elderly 34-35

International 8-9

Environment 36-37

Hong Kong 10-11

Needs served by Crossroads

partnerships 38-41

12-13

Developing global

Health 14-15

HIV/AIDS 16-17

Education 44-49

Conflict 18-19

Social welfare and

community development

Refugee Run 20-21 Disasters 22-23

Typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda

24-25

Job creation 26-27

Rehabilitation and recovery 42-43

50-51

Finances 52-55 Fundraising 56-57 Crossroads’ volunteers

58-61

Press 62-63

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64-67


THANK YOU We would like to thank all who are part of the Crossroads ‘team’ and that may well mean you! Many may think our team is simply our full time staff, but, in our eyes, it includes our community volunteers, private sector partners, NGO partners, partners in the Government of the HKSAR, and our faithful sponsors and supporters. We are very aware of the crucial role you play in this work. We couldn’t do it without you.

Our report is brimming with stories about the results of this team work. In it, you will see: • many in poverty who have received strategic donated aid, here in Hong Kong and around the world, through Global Distribution • students and others motivated to be change-makers in our needy world after being inspired through Global X-perience • people in poverty empowered by the provision of a regular income through Global Handicrafts • partnerships made, all over the world, between companies and charities through Global Hand This same team also helped us revise the United Nations website over this time, enabling businesses to lend their

support to crucial global issues. It has also seen us attend the World Economic Forum, taking the Refugee Run in 2013 and Struggle for Survival in 2014 to world leaders in Davos. Most importantly, this team work is seeing suffering alleviated here in Hong Kong and across the planet as you will see in this report when you flick through the following pages. But it couldn’t possibly happen without people such as you. Helen Keller, the blind and deaf woman whose life left an indelible impact on the world, said it well. “Alone we can do so little. Together we can do so much.”

2013 saw Crossroads’ director, Malcolm Begbie, presented with the Bronze Bauhinia Star, Hong Kong’s acknowledgement of 30 years’ service to the local and international community.

Thank you for being part of ‘Team Crossroads’. It is our privilege to serve beside you.

This Annual Report is unusual. We are moving to a mid-year-mid-year reporting system so this particular one spans an 18 month period. Our next report will be twelve months, as usual, starting our ‘year’ in July and ending in June.

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We introduced new logos in 2014. Our artists worked with passion, using the art of grassroots communities across the world: places where people have very limited income and tell their story on their walls and in their fabrics. The designers shaped each logo into a globe to show the world-wide reach of our work. They also added cultural richness and an element of joy. The people we serve may often be poor, financially, but they are rich in tradition and in heart. There’s a story behind each logo. Take a look!

Where need meets resource

Fair trade for a fairer world

We distribute quality goods to people in need, in Hong Kong and around the world, in keeping with standards of best practice.

Aid helps people today. An income helps them tomorrow. Global Handicrafts marketplace sells goods made by people in need within Hong Kong, and around the world, on a fair trade basis.

Truck: collecting donated resources

Horizon: ‘sky’s the limit’

Coffee/cocoa bean: sustainable crops

Drum/panpipes: cultural

Lanterns: helping Hong Kong

Thread: textiles

Map: helping the nations

Coins changing hands: fair trade/access to markets

Boat/train: delivering to those in need

Paintbrush/bowl: arts/crafts People with boxes: distribution partners, near and far

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Woman with market stall: gender empowerment


Crossroads: Connecting people in a world of need • Truck: aid/welfare distribution

• Soldier: victims of conflict

• Feet: x-periencing life in another’s shoes

• Woman with basket: poverty alleviation

• Tents: disaster services

• Handshake: partnerships for change

• Water: environment

• Kids: a better world for tomorrow

• Needle/thread: fair trade

Partnering to change a world in need

X-periencing life in another’s shoes

Global Hand is a match-making service which links forprofit and non-profit organisations who want to partner to help meet global need.

We offer simulation x-periences in which participants step, briefly, ‘into the shoes’ of people facing global challenges: war, poverty, HIV vulnerability, blindness, environmental challenges, hunger, and more.

Turbines: environmental care

Graduation cap: education

Road: global reach

Smart phone: digital inclusion

Handshake: partnerships for change

Feet: x-periencing life in another’s shoes Water: environmental need

Stethoscope: medical need

Hammer/ nails: income generation Sacks/pot/pitcher: community development

Soldier: victims of conflict

Barbed wire: breaking through oppression of poverty

Tents: disaster need Raised hand: participants inspired to engage

Woman: poverty

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604,990 LIVES impacted in 2013

HK$23 impacts one life

Across Crossroads’ range of services, we saw 604,990 lives impacted in 2013. The cost of operations averaged $23 per individual life. 6 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


SNAPSHOT

GLOBAL HANDICRAFTS

16,300

Your gift of $100 allows us to send

people helped towards economic independence in 2013

We welcomed our

140,000th

GLOBAL goods worth $900 or more

X-perience

participant since the programmes began

102,670 14,675 community volunteer

hours in 2013

STUDENTS

participated in

Global X-perience

Full time team drawn from

23 nations

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USA Global Hand Vice President Matthew Gow attended the United Nations Global Compact Leaders Summit in New York City in September 2013. At the summit, Global Hand launched the latest version of business.un.org, a platform built by our developers to help businesses partner on UN projects.

Chile Global Handicrafts manager Josh Begbie met with Fair Trade producers Pueblo del Sur in Chile, who supply jewellery and other goods to our handicrafts shop. By selling Pueblo del Sur’s goods, we can help their artisans keep traditional techniques alive, and earn a fair wage for their work.

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Where Crossroads worked in 2013 - 2014:

Global Distribution

Global Hand

Global X-perience

Global Handicrafts


INTERNATIONAL

England Unilever invited Global X-perience to London in May 2014, to help 90 of their Vice Presidents from around the world engage with issues of urban poverty. They discussed a vision to improve conditions for half a million (small-holder) farmers and producers in Unilever’s supply channels. Our team ran Struggle for Survival, our urban poverty simulation, for the delegates.

HK

Ethiopia Mike and Helen Tozer represented Crossroads on a visit to partners in Ethiopia, including this school which received a shipment from Crossroads. They also met producers of the Fair Trade coffee used in our Silk Road Cafe. Crossroads

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Kwai Chung: Crossroads helped JP Morgan bridge the digital divide for disadvantaged students at Fresh Fish Trader’s School, when they donated the funding, and volunteered their labour in our computer processing department, to give the school computers and laptops. For the full story see page 45.

Tuen Mun: At Silk Road Storytime, we invite preschoolers from the community to join us weekly at Crossroads Village for half an hour of songs, stories, and crafts from around the world. We’re helping them learn that no hands are too small to help! Read more on page 47.

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HONG KONG

Where Crossroads worked in 2013 - 2014:

Locations around Hong Kong

Sheung Wan: Our Silk Road Cafe’s pastry supplier, iBakery, trains and employs people with disabilities like Vincent. Our customers love their baked treats, such as iBakery employees enjoy a steady job in a supportive environment that cares for their needs. See page 27 for the full story.

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Needs served by

CROSSROADS 2013-2014

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2013-2014 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

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HEALTH

UN Photo/Tobin Jones

LIKE COALS IN WINTER Looking at Li Na’s serene face, it was impossible to guess the weight of tragedy she had carried throughout her 24 years. Born in Hong Kong, to two parents with severe mental illness, Li Na was put into the care of relatives. Life there was not very different, however, as that environment was likewise unsafe. She was beaten regularly.

working in the grounds of the institution. She became pregnant, but terminated: an action she counts as the single most tragic point in her pain filled life. The regret and grief she felt over the decision haunted her to the point of attempted suicide. “If I had just one more chance,” she says, “I would really want that baby.”

In her teenage years, the full brunt of her suffering seemed to come upon Li Na and she went to a home for those needing psychiatric care. It did not bring the longed for safety either, however, as she was raped there by a man

When we met Li Na, this heartbreak was still so raw that she couldn’t speak of it without tears filling her eyes. But there’s hope in them, now, too. She has received care and medication which has all but eliminated her

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symptoms. She’s now moved into a tiny, independent flat, a flat so small that most of her possessions are stacked on the top of a small bunk bed. She’s engaged to a young man who makes her happy. She’s finally content, though, and very grateful. “So many social workers have helped me,” she says. “So I am now studying social work. I hope to help other people the same way.” Li Na moved into a larger flat and came to us so we could help her furnish it. We were also able to give her a computer for her studies.

Every week, many ‘Li Na’s come through our gates: Hong Kong people whom life has treated harshly and left vulnerable. Chinese people have a traditional saying they quote when describing our work: “like coals in winter”, they say. It’s a picturesque way of describing the timely provision of life’s essentials. We long to warm many more lives who’ve spent too long out in the cold.


BATTLING MALARIA It kills more than 1 million people each year. It claims the life of one in every twenty African children under 5. It’s a public health problem for 40% of the world’s population. This is malaria, the life-threatening yet preventable disease that can eat up more than ¼ of a poor family’s income when one member is affected. The tragedy is that, while malaria is reasonably straightforward to prevent and treat, those most at risk have little access to mosquito nets, medication and health care. A UK manufacturer offered 2,000 nets, on our Global Hand ‘matching’ website, and, in just 6 minutes, they were snapped up by two non-profit organisations: one in Cameroon and one in Nigeria. Both work with communities for whom mosquito nets will be a life-saving tool. That is the kind of match Global Hand loves to make.

CHILDBIRTH MORTALITY IN PNG One of the world’s highest childbirth mortality rates is found in the rugged highlands of Papua New Guinea. In its isolated villages, it is the norm for women to give birth at home under unsanitary conditions. Too many babies die of preventable causes, such as pneumonia. Too many mothers die of infections they would not have contracted under sterilised conditions or could easily have had treated if they had been able to get to a clinic. A match on Global Hand played its part in helping combat this problem. An Australian laundry company which supplies hotel chains offered bed linen on Global Hand’s ‘matching’ website and a clinic in Papua New Guinea rapidly responded. This clinic is committed to lowering the death rate by expanding its clinic for mothers and babies, and now uses what could well be the best quality linen of any clinic in rural Papua New Guinea. A supply of linen sounds almost unexciting to those of us for whom it is an assumed provision in life. “For most areas,” though, we were told, “this is the first linen they have received.” It is extraordinary to think so simple a gift can help in the battle to save lives.

Birthing suite before

Birthing suite after

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HIV/AIDS PROMOTING DIGNITY: HIV SUPPORT FOR UGANDA The HIV epidemic in Uganda has left more than 1 million children orphaned. In some cases, elderly grandparents take up their care, but, for many, it is older children who are suddenly thrust into responsibility as heads of households. Crossroads’ shipment to partners in the Bogosa region, Eastern Uganda, was hand-tailored to serve as a ‘bridge’ for support community strategies to bring relief from poverty.

Medical equipment from Crossroads has revolutionised care at this rural health centre. For the first time, they can offer diabetes and blood pressure tests and have totally upgraded their level of care: “We can now offer inpatient services where clients are hospitalised on proper hospital beds,” they wrote. “We can give better handling of critical patients with these trolleys. People are flocking to the centre for medical services!”

CAPITAL INVESTMENT Crossroads’ goal for this shipment, as for all, was to make a capital investment in the lives of those in need, not with finance, but with a strategic injection of goods to equip initiatives that will multiply themselves in years to come. Our partners told us: “Your support is a huge investment in the future of our nation. Just imagine the number of people who are going to be influenced through the items you’ve donated. When you set up an institution, you solidify a movement.” It was, they said, in keeping with their motto: “Promoting Dignity”. 200 children received toys, clothes and school books. All are from homes managed by widows or elderly grandparents who struggle to keep their little ones in school. Many of the children had never owned a toy before.

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AIDS X-PERIENCE OPENS IN KAZAKHSTAN In 2013, our partners in Kazakhstan opened a new Aids X-perience simulation, bringing the heart and vision of our Aids X-perience in Hong Kong to people in Shymkent. Crossroads’ directors were there for the opening of the X-perience.

Crossroads in Kazakhstan opened its own version of an HIV/AIDS X-perience, similar in concept to ours in Hong Kong, but with four local stories.

Participants listen to recordings through earphones as they walk through the story lane, showing ways they live their daily lives against a backdrop of challenges.

In coping with financial problems, emotional disappointment, the desire for friends or family heartbreak, some make choices which place them at risk.

Some become lured into lifestyles of dependency and potential vulnerability to HIV/AIDS.

They are ‘tested’ and, afterwards, discover whether they are HIV negative or positive.

Following the x-perience, participants write reflections they post on a Tree of Life.

For those in Hong Kong, you are welcome to make bookings for the Hong Kong Aids X-perience. Just email globalx@crossroads.org.hk or phone +852 2984 9309.

Crossroads director, Malcolm Begbie, attended the opening.

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CONFLICT The war in Syria began in 2011. Many thought it would soon be over, but, tragically, it has continued and has seen millions of people displaced. Over 2.7 million Syrians have moved over their border in what Antonio Gutteres, the United

Nations’ High Commissioner for Refugees, has called it ‘the biggest humanitarian tragedy since the Rwandan genocide.’

A HAND-MADE FUTURE: Embroidery puts refugee children in school As refugee families battle for survival with the ongoing conflict in Syria, education is one of the greatest casualties. While living in Syria, prior to the fighting, many refugees had professional careers and their children looked forward to the same. Now, however, gifted young people watch their career aspirations fade as education moves beyond their reach. The Basmeh

and Zeitooneh’s Women’s Workshop in Shatila refugee camp trains 120 Palestinian and Syrian refugee women in embroidery and crochet, allowing them an opportunity to sell their production and earn an income with dignity. This is allowing mothers to put their children in school. We are delighted to sell their embroidery in our marketplace. Every piece helps another woman and, very often, another child.

SYRIAN REFUGEE CHILD: ”DON’T LET THE WORLD FORGET US” Kareem, a thirteen year old Syrian refugee, was the sole breadwinner for his mother and sisters. He worked in a car mechanic shop, leaving home at 5.30 am and returning at 11.00 pm. This brought in US$7 a day. School, of course, was out of the question.

When Kareem heard that one of the aid workers in his refugee camp would be attending Crossroads’ Refugee Run at the World Economic Forum, he made a plaintive request: “When you meet with the people there, tell them ‘Don’t let the world forget us’.”

His boss took advantage of the young boy, abusing him physically, emotionally, mentally and even sexually. He also ‘sold’ Kareem to other customers, at US$1 per time, for sex services.

After the Refugee Run, many participants, deeply touched by the simulation, were wonderfully responsive. One, herself a refugee from the Lebanese conflict in 1982, took action. She raised

funds to support education in Lebanon for hundreds of refugee children. Among those now in school, wonderfully, is Kareem. Sometimes people ask the purpose of the experiential activities we run. The answer is simple. We want to reach participants so they, in turn, can reach those who are in dire need of support.

“When you meet with people there, tell them ‘Don’t let the world forget us’.” 18 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Syrian refugee children are frequently subject to ongoing abuse, even in the ‘tent cities’ where they try to start a new life


HARROW STUDENTS SUPPORT SYRIAN REFUGEE CHILDREN During the appalling winter of 2013/2014, Syrian refugees lived in mud that was a foot deep, with snow and wind bringing temperatures down to almost unbearable levels. As the refugee numbers rose beyond anyone’s

expectations, relief supplies fell short of the need. “Two children froze overnight” an aid worker told us, by phone, begging us for urgent action. It was a similar story every week.

“I wish you could have been there for the distribution,” the aid worker later told us. “It was like drawing a smile on the children’s faces.”

Hong Kong’s Harrow International School responded with a gift of HK $500,000. This allowed 5,000 children to receive winter kits. We partnered with an NGO on the ground who purchased what they needed, giving the kids

warm clothes and, as an extra touch, a new toy as well: for some, the only toy they now own. “I wish you could have been there for the distribution,” the aid worker later told us. “It was like drawing a smile on the children’ s faces.”

Harrow students supported refugee Syrian children

Crossroads’ representative, David Begbie, visited Syrian refugees following the distribution of winter kits

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REFUGEE RUN: GALVANISING SUPPORT FOR SYRIA AT WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM During the World Economic Forum (WEF), in Davos 2013, Crossroads again offered the Refugee Run. This year, it was part of the WEF official programme with special focus on the tragedy in Syria. Following the event, participants donated funds to put hundreds of children in schools.

The Refugee Run cast members are not trained actors. They are aid workers and former refugees committed to helping deal with conflict situations

Pierre der’ interrogates Camp ‘comman cer, Offi , Chief Supply n Luigi Sigismondi Ru e ge fu Re Unilever, at the

“I had the privil ege go through a sim to ilar exercise a few y ears ago, and I think it has changed my life .” Peter Bradbeck-Let math, Chairman of the Ne stle Group

Piers Cumberlege, Head of Partnership, World Economic Forum

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Jonathon Reckford, CEO, Habitat for Humanity, at the Refugee Run


Soldiers ‘interrogate’ Robert Elliott, Senior Partner, Linklaters, at the Refugee Run

Participants in the Refugee Run do not watch a video. They take a few steps ‘in the shoes’ of refugees, ‘x-periencing’, for a short time, some of the struggles they face

een ng Philippe and Qu Their Majesties, Ki n Ru e um, at the Refuge Mathilde, of Belgi

“I found it incredible… that you can put yourself in a room like this and feel as much as you feel.” Facebook Sheryl Sandberg, COO of

ook COO, with Sheryl Sandberg, Faceb ary General of the Laura Liswood, Secret rld Leaders, in the Council of Women Wo the Refugee Run ing debrief follow

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DISASTERS TYPHOON USAGI: HONG KONG Hong Kong is one of the best prepared cities in the world to face typhoons, which it regularly meets. For Hong Kong’s poor, though, it can be something to watch with trepidation, knowing that, for example, village housing can be vulnerable to flooding, collapse and irreparable damage.

She was one of many who came through Crossroads’ gates, following the typhoon. We appreciate all who donate to assist with disaster recovery, equipping us to assist those across the world or across the street.

When severe Typhoon Usagi hit Hong Kong in September 2013, Mrs Wang and her family watched as it flooded their small village-style home in Hong Kong’s New Territories. Almost every piece of furniture was damaged. Caring for four children and dependent on welfare, Mrs Wang didn’t know how to make the family home liveable again. The Social Welfare Department referred her to Crossroads. Mrs Wang seemed overwhelmed with the choice of goods available to her, donated from all over Hong Kong. She left with a dining table, six chairs, a double bed, wardrobe, two bookcases for her children, and home appliances.

DISASTER RISK REDUCTION: MAKING THE WORLD A SAFER PLACE

Yet, we are also told, that over the past decade, disasters have seen 1 million people killed, 2 billion people affected, and 3 trillion dollars incurred through disaster losses.

As part of our commitment to help reduce disaster risk, a Crossroads team attended the United Nations’ Global Platform in 2013. This conference brought together a cross-section of humanity inviting all to express their views: children, people with disabilities, business leaders, scientists, members of the non-profit sector and governments from both wealthy and poorer nations.

Too often, according to the United Nations, people say, “We never imagined such a thing could happen.” It is time, the United Nations says, that we do imagine that it could happen and that we act. That is why the United Nations is committed to reducing the risk posed by disasters. The UNISDR, its Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR), leads the way.

All worked towards the establishment of a new set of international guidelines, a ‘framework for action’, to be finalised in Japan, in 2015. The goal is simple. The world is seeing disasters bring too many deaths and too much damage. That can be changed. Crossroads is keen to do anything possible to help make that happen.

Experts tell us, “There is no such thing as a ‘natural’ disaster. There are natural hazards, but they only become disasters when man makes mistakes.”

13 year old Dhang, who battles with cerebal palsy, from Vietnam, was a young speaker at the conference. Floods had threatened to wash away his family’s home and, in the face of danger, none of them knew how best to protect the life of a child with disabilities. Dhang spoke powerfully, urging the international community to give DRR education to children with disabilities and their families so that, in an emergency, they would know how their lives might be saved. Dhang is pictured here with his mother, left, his carer, right, and Crossroads’ director, Sally Begbie.

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YA’AN EARTHQUAKE IN SICHUAN We love to see partnerships empower people in tough places. Multinational law firm, Hogan Lovells, has always demonstrated a strong humanitarian imperative. It was no surprise, therefore, when they asked us for ways they could donate to the recovery effort following Sichuan’s Ya’an earthquake in 2013. They gave generously and saw clothing reach people devastated by the damage.

X-PERIENCING DISASTERS During the 2014 World Economic Forum, in Davos, Switzerland, we adapted our regular ‘Struggle for Survival’ programme to give it a Disaster Risk Reduction focus. Participants were told that their jobs had been lost through a disaster and, with no business

continuity plan, they now had to battle to find income so they could feed and house their families. The post simulation discussion was led by Margareta Wahlstrom (below right), Special Representative of the Secretary General for Disaster Risk Reduction,

who, subsequently, asked us to develop an experiential programme fully focussed on reducing disaster risk. The new ‘Disaster X-perience’ is now under development, with details available on our website: www.crossroads.org.hk

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TYPHOON HAIYAN/YOLANDA: The indomitable Filipino spirit PHILIPPINES “Filipinos are waterproof!” That was the cry of the indomitable Filipino spirit as the nation fought back against Typhoon Haiyan in 2013, one of the strongest typhoons in recorded history. It typified the Filipino determination to cope, and even use a little humour, when faced with hardship and tragedy. The United Nations says 11 million people were impacted.

IMMEDIATE RESPONSE: DISASTER KITS Four days after the typhoon struck, we rushed relief supplies to the Philippines. As disaster preparedness is an important part of our relief work, we had been packing kits over recent months so we could be ready, should disaster strike. The Hong Kong community rallied, further, in continuing to supply further kits over the ensuing days and early weeks. Our profound thanks to the thousands in Hong Kong who helped us with the relief and reconstruction efforts in the Philippines!

Volunteers pack disaster kits, year round, so we can act quickly should disaster strike. Would you like your organiasation to participate? Email us and we’ll send you the details. Or go to our Home Page and look at ‘Find Projects’ for more detail.

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IMMEDIATE RESPONSE: EDUCATION KITS One urgent goal, following a disaster, is to ensure children are back in school as quickly as possible. We also, therefore, prepare educational kits year round and were able to rush these to the Philippines, as well as construction materials, to support the children’s return to education.

BUILD BACK BETTER Following a tragedy such as this, there is no point in rebuilding homes that will not stand in the face of the hazards which so often impact vulnerable locations. We therefore work with partners who commit to ‘build back better’. They take care to target new structures that will be far more resilient than the earlier ones. We have repeatedly shipped building materials, and sent cash donations, to assist the reconstruction effort.

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JOB CREATION A FAIR DEAL FOR CHILE’S ARTISANS “Chile is losing its artisan culture,” says Alvador, a 58-year-old copper craftsman who makes beautiful jewellery stamped with traditional designs. Due to the gap between Chile’s rich and poor - one of the widest in the world - Alvador is one of a dwindling number of Chilean artists who can still make money from their handiwork. Fair Trade is more than just an idea for Alvador. It’s literally the only reason he can afford to make his jewellery passion a business. He works with Pueblos del Sur, a Fair Trade cooperative that helps Chilean craftspeople find international customers for their work, where they will get a fair price, be paid on time, and network with other artists to share ideas. Our marketplace, Global Handicrafts, sells clay ocarinas and pendants from Pueblo del Sur artists, along with their exquisite glass jewellery.

DANCING GOATS AND FAIR TRADE COFFEE

Dancing goats are, it would seem, responsible for the world’s love of coffee. According to legend, Kaldi, an Ethiopian goatherder from ancient times, found his goats very spirited on one occasion, seeming to ‘dance’ near a certain plant with little red berries. The latter turned out to be coffee beans and the rest is history.

Legend or not, with centuries of coffee history behind them, one would think Ethiopia’s coffee farmers should now be thriving. Until recently, though, farmers such as Mama Doree and Burtukan Zeleke received only a pittance for their long years of labour in the famed Sidmamo region. Many of life’s basics were beyond their families’ reach: clean water, adequate clothes, medical care, proper housing, and education for their children.

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Enter a Fair Trade cooperative. “Now we are getting great dividends!” Mama told members of a visiting Crossroads team. Both families, along with many others, now have those much-needed clothes, clean water, better housing, and education for their kids. As our team photographed Burtukan Zeleke, in front of a huge pile of coffee for export, she gave them a message to pass on. “This coffee,” she says, “is the best not only in Ethiopia but in

the world. You should all buy and drink it!” Happily, we in Hong Kong do! This cooperative is one of the suppliers whose coffee we sell in our Fair Trade Cafe. Come join us and raise a cup to Kaldi and to Fair Trade!


HELP FOR A SILENT WORLD Lei Mei was 25 when she suddenly lost her hearing. It was a devastating blow. She knew that being deaf in Asia would mean the loss of her job as a salesperson. Her future looked bleak. She did, indeed, lose her job and learned that the only way she could hear again would be a cochlear implant, costing her US$30,000. She had been earning approx. US$200 per month and paying all her costs out of that. This purchase, then, was impossible. She tried selling goods on the street at night but, with her hearing challenge, this was harder for her than others in the noisy marketplace and she struggled. With just two years’ schooling, she had nothing else to fall back on. In time, she was introduced to ‘Hearts and Hands’, an organisation which had, amazingly, been set up in her area to employ people with hearing difficulties. They taught her how to make handicrafts and, today, she has done so well she is in charge of the stock and fabric rooms. When our Global Handicrafts team visited, they told us, “She said that normally, in her local community, deaf people are treated as second rate and very often cheated. Here, though, she is genuinely respected and valued and nobody cheats anyone. It is truly run on a fair trade basis. She loves this work.”

DIFFERENT ABILITIES, ONE PASSION! Only about 13% of Hong Kong people with disabilities are economically active, Hong Kong’s Labour & Welfare Department reported last year. Providing jobs, therefore, is crucial. iBakery has created a fun and fulfilling workplace in which people with disabilities make bread, cookies and cakes, earning both a living and self-respect. Their slogan: different abilities, one passion. This photo shows them celebrating their success.

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GENDER EQUALITY HARD TO WRITE ABOUT; HARDER TO LIVE WITH Women too often struggle because of society’s ‘unmentionable’ topics. These two stories are simple examples of ways women may suffer in silence.

UNFAIR SHAME It’s not a topic that makes for polite conversation, but the fact is that women’s underwear is unaffordable for many of the world’s poor. In one Sri Lankan children’s home, for example, the female staff often are as much in need as the children they serve: for them, money is so

scarce that new outer clothes, let alone underwear, can be an almost unimaginable luxury.

daily school attendance, because they lack decent clothes, including the simple provision of a bra.

Young women like these in Sri Lanka, and similar economies, can be held back from pathways out of poverty, such as a job interview, or

We were grateful, then when an Australian company used Global Hand, our matchmaking website, to offer new women’s underwear and

sleepwear, worth US$100,000. They gave an extraordinary 16,000 items, a gift so large that it saw not only generous provision for women in Sri Lanka, but, as well, help sent to women in Armenia and to female flood victims in the Philippines.

‘NOT JUST A PIECE OF CLOTH’ Extreme taboo surrounds the process of menstruation in some parts of India, says local NGO, Goonj. What options do women have, then, without access to feminine hygiene products? In rural India, millions of women improvise with rags or, unthinkably, sand, ash and the like. As a result, they meet infection and disease, not to mention a crippling lack of dignity.

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Goonj is doing what it can to restore that dignity to Indian women. In a project they call ‘Not Just a Piece of Cloth’, they produce pads and underwear out of cleaned, recycled textiles. They distribute these in packs to rural women, teaching them how to sew pads of their own. For the women, this simple provision is proving liberating and empowering.

This creative organisation also supports its women with another of their innovative enterprises. They train women to make paper bags out of recycled newspaper so they can earn income based on fair trade principles. These bags are sold all over the world, including Crossroads.


Peruvian craftswoman who made Crossroads’ Christmas cards in 2013

CHRISTMAS CARDS - PERU “Those were the years of violence,” said Juliana, a Peruvian woman who works with craft collective Kuyanakuy. She reflected on the bloody internal conflict that raged in parts of Peru in the early 1990s, leaving at least 70,000 people dead. At the height of the violence, Juliana was sheltering 12 families who were forced out of their

homes to flee the terror. Although the conflict has now settled in Juliana’s community, it left deep scars. Women who lived through that time lost husbands, children, and beloved neighbours. Many found themselves impoverished without their breadwinner or another steady source of income.

Out of these ashes, a group of women banded together to form Kuyanakuy, a name that means ‘Let us love’: a place where today women survivors of the conflict can meet, support each other, cry together, and work together to create beautiful handicrafts drawing on rich Peruvian artistic traditions and imagery.

All the craftswomen are from low-income families and most are illiterate when they join, with little chance of a decent, steady job. Through Kuyanakuy, though, they are now learning to read and write alongside their newfound handicraft skills. As well, of course, this work generates income for them as they care, singlehandedly, for their families.

CREATING JOBS FOR OLDER WOMEN: HONG KONG “Nobody wanted to hire us!” we were told by women struggling to generate income here in Hong Kong. For those who are older or who live with disabilities, finding a stable job can be challenging in today’s competitive world. Happily, though, the story has a good ending for a group of women who have been trained and employed to cook and clean by a social enterprise group: one committed to creating employment and giving women a salary. They now work at a canteen near Hong Kong’s Polytechnic University and Crossroads donated the pots, pans, and utensils they use. We provided not only the quality kitchen equipment but also the tables, chairs, and other furniture required to run the new canteen. We were only too happy to supply what was needed to help empower more disadvantaged women.

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DIGITAL DIVIDE MICROSOFT SERVING A WORLD IN NEED The digital divide is very real in remote parts of Nepal. About 50% of the population is illiterate and, given the pressure of poverty, there is a high drop-out rate from schools. Even those who stay in school might not emerge with an ideal education as infrastructure and equipment is often insufficient. Meanwhile, Microsoft told us they were interested in helping people in need. “We were just looking for an opportunity to allow our team to give back in some way to one of the global communities we serve,” they wrote. They came out to Crossroads and took part in our poverty x-perience, the Struggle for Survival, along with a massive volunteering team-build. Following that, they assisted with our shipments, gave Crossroads exceedingly generous software provision and then began discussions about helping people cross the digital divide. The result? Microsoft, through a partner group, New Zealand non-profit, Global Equity Brokers, donated hardware, software, and expertise to children in a remote part of Nepal. They gave a fully equipped computer lab, with twenty computers and the needed software. They also sent six members of staff to install it and train the students.

This equipped the laboratory to provide 1500 computer training slots for students each week, enabling many to cross the digital divide. We often say that, in this work, we love to be as our name suggests: a crossroads between people in need and those who can help.

“Our computer lab is really becoming fruitful for students of class 4-8. It’s been nearly 1 year but we can’t express the outcome in words.” School principal to Microsoft

CAMEROON: STUDENTS’ FIRST TIME TO TOUCH COMPUTERS In a nation where, the United Nations International Telecommunication Union reports, only 6.4% of the population is connected to the Internet, children in Cameroon are at a significant technological disadvantage which helps keep them trapped in poverty. When a Cameroonian community wanted to bring their kids up to speed with their global peers, Crossroads shipped

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computers to set up the brand new computer lab. Now, children and other members of the community, including widows and single mothers, are using the computers to learn skills that make them more employable. “Many have never seen a computer before,” wrote NGO staff. In a world where, in many countries, computers are taken for granted, it is a

reality check for us when we see how real the digital divide continues to be. If you are replacing your computer, or your company is, please consider Crossroads before throwing anything away. It may well be that we can use them to help see lives changed. Email donategoods@crossroads. org.hk


THE CROSSROADS EQUATION: Multiplying lives released from poverty The day the copper mines changed hands was a huge blow for the people of Kitwe in Zambia. The government gave the huge local mines over to the private sector and, quickly, our partners tell us, approx. 70% -80% of the employees were made redundant. As the mines had provided the major employment for the area, and many men were then out of work, their wives tried to become the breadwinners by selling vegetables. That brought in little income, however, and depression, even suicide, soon took hold in the community. The toll of the massive unemployment was compounded as HIV/ AIDS wrought the area a further deadly blow. Children were left without parents and many had to fend for themselves by sleeping on the streets and trying to find a living through simple jobs, selling drugs, or prostitution.

employed by the local government for a short term project and earned an astonishing US$2,500, more than he had ever dreamed possible. “My life begins now,” he said. He bought a photocopy machine and a computer and began a tiny business. Today he has his own centre and four employees. He has taught many more students, giving them the chance to cross the digital divide and find a different future. The same has been true of other students whose own computer training has resulted in others being trained. We love the multiplication in stories like this. We call it the ‘Crossroads Equation’. Computers sent from Hong Kong can literally re-start people’s lives and they, in turn, can then multiply many, many more. It’s why we love this work and why we love your help. If you are upgrading your computer, please don’t throw them out. Please email donategoods@ crossroads.org.hk

Education, in the midst of this, was beyond the reach of many. Our partners in Kitwe decided to open a school and computer training centre which they asked us to equip. The number of students enrolling has constantly increased such that, today, they are needing to open another school. A typical student was Brian, a young man in his twenties who, every day, sold homemade scones and cupcakes from a basket he took from office to office. He earned very little money, but saw no alternative. He enrolled in the computer training centre and learned quickly. After graduation, he was

The donation of a few computers, can result in DIGITAL EDUCATION FOR MANY

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DISABILITIES

MACLAREN STROLLERS CHANGE LIVES Every gift can change a life. When Maclaren, maker of high end children’s strollers, gave Crossroads a massive donation of brand new strollers, they reached needy families across the world. Some were included in shipments to places such as Uganda, but most were given to children right here in Hong Kong.

One stroller went to Chi Kin, a 3 year old with special needs that prevent him from walking. His family’s limited budget has already been stretched with medical bills. So, for them to get him, a big boy, around busy Hong Kong, he needed the ‘Rolls Royce’ of strollers, albeit on a ‘Mini’ budget. The sight of the Maclaren gift, brand new and still in its packaging, left them open mouthed with amazement. It was perfect for his needs and, best of news, it cost them nothing.

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Mei Li is a widow, a mother of five, and completely blind. Living on a shoestring budget, she could not afford the needed furniture for her home, much less a stroller for her baby. Though unable to see, she carried her baby around on her hip throughout the day, while trying to care for her other four children. When she heard a brand new stroller could be given, her hands stroked it in wonder. For her, too, this was a transformative gift.


L’OCCITANE FIGHTS BLINDNESS It is a shocking truth, but 8 out of every 10 people with sight problems should be able to see. Visual impairment can be prevented or cured with the right resources made available. 9 out of 10 live in low income countries or communities. French retailer L’Occitane understands this. It has long felt a connection with those with sight problems. The company and their richly fragranced cosmetics and beauty products, so reliant on the senses of smell and touch, have adopted blindness as a particular focus for their social

responsibility activities. Their founder, Olivier Baussan, wants to turn one of his old factories into a museum where he can teach blind children about careers working with aromas.

Not only was Crossroads able to help L’Occitane, but L’Occitane graciously helped Crossroads too. The company raised over HK$5000 for our Blind X-perience. Having been open for some years, its

complex equipment needed funding for renovation. Now, with L’Occitane’s help, it is open, year round, to serve its purpose: giving sighted people an x-perience of life for those who cannot see.

The company, worldwide, supports work against preventable blindness and its Hong Kong office therefore contacted us to book our Blind X-perience for their employees. Mo Tam, one of their staff, said of the x-perience, afterwards, “I felt dazed and confused. It was very scary to walk in the dark. I was afraid to fall. Fortunately, our guide led us all the way. I realised the importance of being helped and how we should always help people in need.”

BUILDING FUTURES Serwanga, disabled from birth, desperately needed a wheelchair that could get him to school in his Ugandan village. Without an education, he faces a life of extreme poverty, just like that of his parents. Even when he makes it to class, learning is a challenge for Serwanga and his classmates. “This school had so few teaching items,” our partners told us, “it had left many of these children in despair.” When Crossroads shipped a 40’ container of educational provision to Serwanga’s community, it was an injection of hope for the children and their teachers. Packed in with the equipment and supplies was a new wheelchair for Serwanga. This is a life-changer for him. Mobility means access to school and that, in turn, means access to a very different future.

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ELDERLY FROM HOUSE TO HOME At 60, Mr Mak is nearing life’s end. He battles lupus but, as well, recently learned he is dying of cancer. The doctors have told him they could no longer do anything but help him manage the pain.

cabinets for storage, drawers, chairs, a washing machine and other items. Later, one of our team visited and he said, that, now, his happiness comes from “having this lovely apartment and sitting by the window on my couch.” The gratitude and humility that radiate from Mr Mak are remarkable.

Before he became sick, Mr Mak worked as a welder on construction sites but now, too ill to continue, he depends on social welfare. He was granted a government flat but struggled to furnish it. He owned just a bunk bed and a fridge. Without any cupboards, he could only store his belongings in bags on the bunk. With no couch, he could only use the lower bunk as a place to sit.

Half of all the goods Crossroads receives are distributed inside Hong Kong to people like Mr Mak: individuals whom life has dealt a heavy blow and who need support.

His social worker helped him visit Crossroads, where he chose all his other furniture needs: a small couch, side table, two large

ZIMBABWE’S GRANNIES FACE DOWN BELEAGUERED ECONOMY As women in Zimbabwe face unemployment of 97%, a creative group of grannies are fighting back, using a combination of hard work and massive personality. As they had no factory, no equipment, and no infrastructure, the grannies took on the economy with knitting needles. These were an obvious choice for them as knitting could be done anywhere, any time, and required only cheap materials. The grannies produce animals with attitude, funky caricatures with often cheeky expressions. They are among the bestsellers in our fair trade marketplace, Global Handicrafts. The women call their creations ‘shamwari’, Zimbabwe’s word for ‘friends’, and each comes with the name and photo of the grannie who created it. Their organisational name is as funky as their products: ‘Gogo Olive’. ‘Gogo’ means a ‘grannie’, or someone similarly loved in one’s life. ‘Olive’, given its traditional association, means ‘hope’: a commodity in very short supply among the struggling people of Zimbabwe.

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TAI O FIRE Mr Chen, a 94 year old Hong Kong man, has lived through his fair share of tragedy, war, and economic hardship. Nothing, however, prepared him for the devastation that followed when a fire swept through the traditional fishing village of Tai O where he lived, destroying his home. “This was the one thing I owned, the thing I was proud of,” he told our staff when they visited. In picturesque Tai O, life is slow and many families still depend on fishing for their livelihood. The average income for many local residents, especially elderly people like Mr Chen, is low. Where, then, was he to go? How was he to start life over? Thankfully, the Social Welfare Department placed Mr Chen in public housing, so that, while he yet mourned the loss of his home, he could be safe and sheltered. Mr Chen still had one critical need in his new home: a washing machine. This is a costly item, particularly for one at his age and stage of life, but it’s an essential, with his hands no longer up to the task of handwashing. We gladly provided a washing machine to Mr Chen, giving him what support we can in the final years of his life. With the average lifespan increasing in Hong Kong, older people can find it hard to meet their ongoing needs and to cope with life alone. So, when the Italian Women’s Association, who regularly support our work, were kind enough to offer us a huge supply of pasta, we knew where to pass it on! One of our partner NGOs in Hong Kong routinely visits the elderly and they distributed this generous gift (pictured above), offering both practical support and a listening ear.

Medical conditions for patients in Moldova are stretched. In some parts of the country, makeshift beds and other equipment provide very limited solutions, leaving the aged, in particular, vulnerable. 2013 saw Crossroads send a shipment of hospital beds and medical equipment to our partners on the ground committed to upgrading care.

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ENVIRONMENT PRODUCT LIFECYCLE AT CROSSROADS Crossroads does all it can to keep goods from landfill. We check goods to see if they are of suitable quality to give people in need. Usually they are, but, if not, our volunteers repair or strengthen them where possible. Beyond that point, we seek other ways to make the most of these goods.

In the first half of 2014, our Environment Department fully reworked our recycling programme. With creativity, energy, and commitment, they found additional ways to give unwanted goods, wherever possible, a ‘second life’.

Cardboard and paper

Metal Rejected goods, together with packaging and other waste, are rigorously handled by our Environment Department. It works diligently to undertake product stewardship and recycle all that is possible in Hong Kong.

For example, we give our Waste Electronic & Electronic Equipment (WEEE), to other NGOs helping people in poverty. In turn, they repair, donate or recycle the WEEE.

Glass

Plastics

Image credit: WRAP UK

HURTING PEOPLE ON A HURTING PLANET Crossroads aims to help a hurting planet as well as its hurting people. We give new life to goods otherwise destined for landfill, placing them strategically in the lives of people in need, re-purposing furniture, medical equipment, clothing, play equipment, computers, building materials, bicycles, tools, and more.

KILOGRAMS OF GOODS SAVED FROM LANDFILL THROUGH HK DONATIONS 140,000

120,000

2013 Total of 659,964 kg

2014 (Jan - end of June)

42,194

Total 100,000

36,712 80,000

26,498

60,000 40,000

27,697

28,248

14,067

96,154

53,702

64,607 48,406

20,000

15,296 74,218 8,762

59,142

44,525 28,045

91,105

62,473

Clothing & textiles

Computers & accessories

86,839 Electronics

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81,950

59,821

36,807

Metal

Other items

Paper/ books & magazines

102,621

138,348

Plastics

Woods (eg. furniture)


A COMPACT SOLUTION TO WASTE Living in a city where 13,800 tonnes of waste are sent to landfill each day, we were excited to receive a donated solution for managing Crossroads’ own waste. Every day, as we receive donations, we handle cardboard, metal and plastics: all an abundant by-product of goods donations. With the compacting machine (right), donated by Ladies’ Circle Hong Kong, our environmental staff can compress all of this waste to 1/4 of its original volume. That means we can load four times as much waste onto a truck for recycling, than we previously were able to. Just another way, we are able to look after our world better.

NEW LIFE FOR TRASH Environmental education is one of the goals pursued by our Environment Department. Students from Christian Alliance International School (CAIS), for example, came to Crossroads after they had been learning about the problem of waste. They wanted to see for themselves how Crossroads redistributes unwanted goods, saving millions of items from landfill every year. The students also brought some ‘safe trash’ with them, which they had been collecting for us to use in a new simulation on the environment. It will give an ‘x-perience’ of the lives of people who live and work on rubbish tips.

GREEN THE GAP: UPSCALING IN INDIA The Yamuna River, in Northern India, battles pollution on a tragic scale. Although its waters are clear in the early stages of its journey, when it flows through New Delhi, that drastically changes. Up to 80% of its pollution is gathered in the 22 km stretch within the city. Entrepreneur Vimlendu Jha sought to make a difference. Targeting young Indian students, the leaders of tomorrow’s generation, he sought to gather change-

makers. He soon found, though, that there were more environmental issues to be addressed and, in time, began a very successful scheme they call ‘Green the Gap.’ It was started as a way to give waste another life by upcycling old materials. They purchase materials from ragpickers and waste markets, transforming old tyres, juice cartons and waste fabrics into beautifully designed products. We now stock trendy satchels and bags in our Global Handicrafts store.

These products ‘do a double good’. They are good in brilliantly re-purposing trash and, being a Fair Trade organisation, good for employment opportunity. Many ‘Green the Gap’ workers have come from low income backgrounds and,

by working there, have seen not only their environment improve, but their personal lives as well.

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DEVELOPING GLOBAL PARTNERSHIPS UN Global Compact Leaders Summit 2013: Architects of a Better World Bringing together a world in need is not as easy as it seems. People in need of help can’t always find those with the resources to make a difference. And, people who want to help sometimes need to find further partners too. It can take a confluence of several organisations to make strategic change to our needy planet. In 2013, the United Nations asked us to further the website we built for them, in 2009, so that it gave interested parties a ‘hub’ where they could come together, online, to work out the best ways to address issues such as water, social enterprise, climate, and energy. Matthew Gow, Global Hand’s Vice President, led the project and attended the UN Global Compact Leaders Summit where it was launched to facilitate, as the UN puts it, ‘architects of a better world’.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch: Helping Communities Thrive When Bank of America Merrill Lynch embarked on an office move project in Hong Kong, it took the opportunity to partner with Crossroads to help communities across the globe. Like most Hong Kong firms shifting offices, BofAML faced the challenge of decommissioning thousands of technology equipment -- including computers, monitors, and peripherals -- that would otherwise have ended up in landfills. BofAML’s senior managers designed a program that would donate all this equipment to Crossroads,

ultimately benefiting people in need. BofAML’s IT department designed an integrated plan to maximise the utility of the equipment for Crossroads beneficiaries. Besides funding the reformatting and refurbishment of the machines, employees of the firm also volunteered their time and skills to prepare the computers for donation. This strategic partnership with Crossroads is part of BofAML’s efforts as a responsible company to help its communities thrive, and could well form the blueprint for other firms looking to give their excess goods to

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Crossroads. “They wanted to complete the whole story, end to end,” said Jason Noble, from Crossroads’ partnership team.


ROMANIA: NEW SUPPLIES FOR OLD CHALLENGES No one can forget the images that rocked the world, in the 1990s, when the tragic conditions for orphans in Romania became public. Lack of basic care and attention left many of the children under-developed, uncommunicative and emotionally crippled. Today, things look quite different for thousands of orphans in Romania and other parts of Eastern Europe. Some of those in orphanages have caring staff, desperate to give them a childhood they will be glad to remember. It can be difficult to do so, though, when operating on a small NGO budget, and many of these programmes rely on outside donations and sponsorship.

pillows and duvets, through Global Hand, a number of Romanian orphanages gratefully received the donation. Every strategic donation plays its part in the composite whole.

So, when a UK hotel chain offered 5 star quality bedding,

IT’S IN THE BAG! TESCO’S GENEROUS DONATION It’s in the bag! Retail giant Tesco donated 90,000 tote bags that have been included in shipments to communities in need all over the world. In Cameroon, Tesco bags were given to women as prizes for excellence (pictured here) in their community leadership training programme. Others, in India, were given to impoverished women living in a Calcutta slum.

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DEVELOPING GLOBAL PARTNERSHIPS

Philippe Lacamp, Head of Sustainable Development at Swire, comes under the spotlight in the Refugee Run

Peter Bennett, founder of the Peter Bennett Foundation and long time supporter of Crossroads, tries a typical slum meal

Paul Tighe, Australian Consul General in Hong Kong, with Crossroads’ directors, Malcolm and Sally Begbie

Participants being briefed in the ‘refugee camp’

GLOBAL SURVIVOR 2013 No one believes it’s possible but they come! Once a year, we see leaders from the Hong Kong community undertake a challenge to live an extraordinary 24 hours in simulated ‘poverty’. These men and women, used to top positions in their workplace, step into the shoes of those who are powerless and penniless. With their ‘families’, they face an attack from ‘soldiers’ brandishing fake AK47 rifles, bribe their way past

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‘border crossings’ into safe territory, and survive in their new setting. They construct a slum house out of debris, meeting ambush on the way, and spend 24 hours in their new homes. It is extraordinary to hear senior figures speak of the profound impact this experience has on them, the depth of understanding this brings, together with their desire to help. If you would like to participate in our next Global Survivor, please email us!


SWIRE & HAECO: HUMANITARIAN CARGO SUPPORT In our line of work, envy can take strange forms. It’s not that we aspire to plush offices or elegant homes, but we can become quite envious when we see commercial warehouse equipment which would lighten the load of our volunteers. Until recently, they loaded tonnes of cargo into containers using sheer determination and massive perspiration. Swire, however, has helped. One of its companies, HAECO, specialises in aircraft repair and maintenance services at Hong Kong’s International Airport. Some of their work processes are not unlike our own

so, when we considered fundraising to buy more supportive equipment, we consulted HAECO for their recommendation.

Wells, however, is a professional with the needed expertise and devoted his spare time over several weeks to fit it precisely to purpose.

As it happened, the man we spoke to had been to Crossroads and undertaken our poverty x-periential programme. “Take what you like!” he told our team, as he showed them a collection of equipment the airport no longer needed.

As we say, it’s a strange kind of envy we harbour here. Sometimes the business community helps us with a straight up financial gift, and that is always welcome. Sometimes, they help with the provision of the needed expertise or equipment, and that can also be transforming. We are constantly looking for commercial partnerships, large and small, that can build capacity and empower us further on behalf of the powerless.

And the story got better. Some adjustments were needed for our use and these might have proved expensive. One of our volunteers, Ian

MAERSK Maersk shipping line has entered into a strategic partnership with Crossroads, committed to transporting up to twenty 40’ containers in 2013. David Skov, head of South China Cluster at Maersk Line, is seen here signing

the commitment with Malcolm Begbie, director of Crossroads. Begbie said, “This is a first for Crossroads: an empowering gift for which we are grateful. When shipping is assured by a company, we can guarantee help to those who cannot afford transportation of the goods they so badly need.”

SPONSORS OF CROSSROADS’ EVENT AT WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM 2013

Crossroads is grateful for our invaluable partners who make it possible for us to run simulations at the World Economic Forum, Davos.

Sponsors

2014

Premium Sponsors

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REHABILITATION AND RECOVERY DRUG ADDICTS START A NEW LIFE Lewis felt his life spiral out of control when Hong Kong’s SARS crisis hit in 2003. With the economy impacted, Lewis, as did thousands of others, lost his job. He took solace in drugs. At first it was marijuana, and then harder drugs. Soon, he was addicted to ketamine. “My family didn’t know what to do,” he said, “but they were always supportive.” It was the thought of hurting his family and friends so deeply that finally flicked the switch for Lewis mid way through 2013. He knew he had to get help. Thankfully for Lewis and hundreds of addicts like him, there are groups in Hong Kong waiting to support those who want to get clean. One of these, Mission Ark in the New Territories, was where Lewis found his new home and it was here that

Crossroads staff met him and heard his story. For several months he has lived there, finding support, mentorship and recovery. It’s a long road, but Lewis is confident that his drug days are over. We equipped this drug rehab centre that has helped Lewis and around 80 others per year. They needed kitchen equipment for their canteen and furniture and computers for their offices. Seeing their humble, though beautiful, countryside premises and the way they manage so much care with so little, makes it all the more joyful to be able to give them the things they need out of the abundance of our warehouse, saving them tens of thousands of dollars!

DRUG REHAB CENTRE - KAZAKHSTAN Intoxicated people are a part of the fabric of life on the streets of Shymkent, Kazakhstan. “Most people ignore happy drunks and avoid violent drunks,” says Crossroads’ partner Salem Union. “Every family has been affected.” In winter, the below-freezing temperatures become deadly for addicts sleeping rough. Colleagues in the area began patrolling the city

during the winter months, taking the homeless into a shelter. They started with 23 people, helping them find jobs, identification papers, care and rehabilitation. Some needed multiple amputations of frostbitten legs and fingers. By the following summer, all had found a new place in society. We sent goods to furnish this shelter. Carpet tiles, household furniture, a

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television, clothing, crockery, and kitchen equipment all helped transform a bare building into a home. Men who had undergone amputations and found it difficult to transfer from beds on the floor to wheelchairs, were given beautiful hotelstyle beds to cater for their needs. It is more than just accommodation. It’s a home that meets a need with love and compassion.

George Bernard Shaw said, “Alcohol is the anaesthesia by which we endure the operation of life.” This centre is designed to help people wake up to a new and far more fulfilling life. By helping furnish the centre, we have sought to invest not just in the building, but in lives.


SARDA DRUG REHAB “We need almost everything!” SARDA (Society for the Aid and Rehabilitation of Drug Abusers) staff told us when describing their many drug rehabilitation facilities across Hong Kong. We listened in amazement at the massive nature of their services, with branches all across Hong Kong that help addicts recover, rehabilitate, and retrain. They undertake this huge operation on a simple budget with great dedication, but limited financial resources. We offered to help outfit their centres which had not been refurbished for years. Twenty trucks left our premises, laden with provision that SARDA had selected. It was our biggest ever single donation to an NGO.

SARDA staff visited Crossroads and were excited to select 20 truckloads of goods to equip their under-resourced rehab centres

Furniture from Crossroads now supports SARDA’s community homes for recovering addicts. Computers and desks have set up a new training scheme (below right) to teach IT skills. Crossroads loves to make an injection of capital, through donated goods, when financial capital is not in the offering. “It can be hard to find funding for drug addicts,” said one of the SARDA staff. It seems that donations are not easily given for drug addicts because “people think they’ve brought it on themselves and don’t deserve help. But we believe everyone deserves a second chance.”

Rehab staff at SARDA work hard with very few resources to help addicts recover. Most of their furnishings, such as chairs and the mattresses in the detox ward badly needed replacing, but budgets are tight. Crossroads was delighted to help fill the gap by giving SARDA goods from our warehouse.

Left: Some of SARDA’s staff, such as this man, are ex-addicts who have completed the programme and now have the opportunity to earn an income as supervisors, mentors, cooks or trainers. Below: Crossroads provided office furniture, computers and other furniture and supplies to fill 20 trucks, giving SARDA’s centres a huge capital injection.

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EDUCATION: GROWING A NEW GENERATION EDUCATION TRANSFORMING SLUM LIFE: INDIA These Indian school boys were taking lessons in a store room because classrooms were overcrowded. Now the school has a brand new building equipped with furniture from Crossroads.

Urban poverty tends to repeat itself with unremitting consistency. It’s not just about a lack of money. It’s too often, also, about alcoholism, drugs, social breakdown, ill health, violence, homicide, or suicide. Two decades ago, in Hyderabad, India, a young woman agonised over the poverty in the nearby slum community and asked herself what she could do. Education, she decided, was the most strategic way to break through the suffering. She began a modest school which, with no resources, she held under a tree. The children loved it and attended in droves until, eventually, the tree was no longer enough. She then re­located to a building where she could accommodate more students. Conditions were less than ideal, but such was the eagerness of the kids to learn that they continued increasing in number. They studied well and achieved, with some ultimately becoming lawyers, accountants, and professionals in other fields. Nonetheless, facilities are insufficient. School assembly takes place in the street, with the roads blocked off either end, as they have no building sizeable enough. With donor support, they found another building which they were able to purchase, while Crossroads had the task of furnishing it. We sent a wide range of provisions, from computers to furniture, text books to clothing.

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A Western sponsor who made a follow up visit wrote to us, “I am just back from a visit to Hyderabad. I was amazed at all you have sent them. As I walked around the school, I saw the desks and chairs, kitchen equipment for the orphans, cupboards and the soft toys as well as many other items, including uniforms.’” Crossroads, as an organisation, is not able to make large capital injections of a financial kind. What we can do, however, is make a capital injection of goods: one which, we trust, can multiply itself in the lives of many who use it in years to come.


JP MORGAN PARTNERSHIP & FRESH FISH TRADERS’ SCHOOL

He is a Hong Kong legend. Poverty forced Leung Kee Cheong to drop out of school at 13 and left him with a passion to see quality education given to children in economic need. Being poor is not a crime,

he believes, but refusing to reverse it is. He is proof of concept. After later qualifying as a teacher, he worked with Hong Kong’s Education Department and, in time, was offered the top job at an elite school. Instead, he took the principal role at the Fresh Fish Traders’ School: one started by the Kowloon Fish Traders Association for their children. It is one of Hong Kong’s poorest schools and risked closure until Mr Leung took over. Today, it thrives, primarily because of its principal and his understanding of his students’ needs. “Children love playing, eating, and being loved,” he says. He makes all three happen

in his school. His education methods are fun, using creative lessons to help children grasp information and stay motivated. He ensures they have enough to eat through a food bank he has opened on site to help both the children and their families. His personal care is boundless. His goal is to know each one by name and to visit their families, where possible, to offer support. The door of his office is always open and, inside, students find toys, snacks, and a listening ear.

the money needed for computer refurbishment and the volunteer labour to undertake it. We gave both desktops and laptops to the school, glad to support Leung Kee Cheong in his mission to help create leaders for Hong Kong’s next generation.

So, when JP Morgan offered Crossroads computers, we immediately thought of this school. Wonderfully, the finance company added to their donation

MORGAN STANLEY INVESTING IN CHILDREN “The majority of schools in rural Nepal are inadequately resourced,” says the NGO, First Steps Himalaya. “Children often have to sit on dirty floors without a teacher present.” This group is building early childhood centres in Nepal that use vibrant educational materials to give little ones a healthy start for their school career. When Morgan Stanley wanted staff to volunteer their time as part of their Corporate Social Responsiblity programme, we partnered with Global Equity

Brokers to link them with First Steps Himalaya. The Morgan Stanley staff designed and created English flash cards that are now in use in Nepalese kindergarten classrooms. They also created more than 500 back-to-school kits to transform educational life for children who have never seen a pen before. Educational investment always pays dividends. Giving a child a fair start in life can be transformative in ways impossible to measure.

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

45


EDUCATION: STUDENTS CHANGING THE WORLD On these pages we want to honour students of all ages who have shown dedication to a world in need. From six year olds to teenagers, we have seen young people pour their efforts into making a difference, self-organised and self-motivated. We salute them all and their hard-won efforts.

SIX YEAR OLD HELPING SYRIAN REFUGEES Six year old Hannah from Hong Kong proved you’re never too young to make a difference. After hearing about the plight of Syrian refugee children, Hannah (right) decided she did not want gifts for her birthday. Instead, she asked the guests at her party to donate help for Syrian refugees. She raised HK$3,300. Each of the kids who gave also sent their photo and a note of support which Crossroads included in packages of clothes and toys that were distributed to kids in refugee camps. Little campaigners can make a mighty difference.

Kids4Kids recipient using his donated sports equipment

Kids4Kids Every year, Kids4Kids, a Hong Kong student NGO, takes action on behalf of kids in need. 100% led by student advocates, they collect goods for children and for households in need. In 2013, together they collected 7,300 educational toys and household appliances.

46 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Their project was backed by Morgan Stanley and logistics assistance given by Kerry Logistics. 14 NGOs received donations which were then re-distributed across Hong Kong.


SILK ROAD STORYTIME: NO HANDS TOO SMALL TO HELP In a world where 1 billion children are living in poverty, we love nothing more than sowing seeds of compassion in even the littlest people in our community and seeing them empowered to help others. Silk Road Storytime happens every two weeks at Crossroads and is a time when preschoolers from around Hong Kong come for stories, songs, and crafts that teach about a world in need. We’ve seen some as young as 4 and 5 eager to make a difference by, for example, donating excess birthday presents to Crossroads. At Silk Road Storytime, we know that no hands are too small to help!

School children who received donated goods through Kids4Kids

Cambodian school started by Sarabe Chan and her colleagues

GET STUFF DONE! As a teenage student, Sarabe Chan came out to Crossroads, back in 2010, to undertake our experiential programme on poverty: Struggle for Survival. She wrote to us, “The work that Crossroads is doing has touched many people, especially youngsters. I remember not knowing a thing about volunteering or poverty back in March 2010, but the simulation definitely planted a seed in me hence my journey from then on in this field.”

Sarabe’s journey has been extraordinary. She, together with Hong Kong University students, began a non-profit called ‘Get Stuff Done’. It has opened a school in Cambodia which, over the years, has continued to grow, accommodating increasing numbers of students and providing both academic and sports facilities. Today, Sarabe works with Habitat for Humanity in China.

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47


EDUCATION: SERVICE LEARNING IN ACTION We offer many activity options for students, of all ages, to become global citizens: internships, student service certificates, on the job training, and simulations where they x-perience life challenges by stepping into another’s shoes.

48 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014 49


SOCIAL WELFARE AND COMMUNITY DE

BABIES BEHIND BARS These babies and children have done nothing wrong, but they are in prison. One of today’s unmentioned tragedies is the fact that, in many countries, children born to prison inmates must live with their parents in jail. The world these little ones grow up in makes them witnesses to anger, violence, and rape. The picture of nursery nurture with gentle care, colourful toys, and a loving family unit are years away from the emotionally abusive environment in which these children must learn their basic life skills. Many find it difficult to recover from their years in prison. One of our partners on the ground in Kazakhstan focuses on care for parents and children in this unthinkable situation. They support them while in prison and offer transitional care and rehabilitation for those who have been released. They were recipients of cargo we shipped to the area, providing kids’ equipment that would brighten the lives of the children and lighten the load for their mothers.

Hong Kong is a city that reveres its older people and Crossroads embraces that value wholeheartedly. Each day, we welcome 10-12 Hong Kong individuals or families - including the elderly - in our warehouse where they can select items that might alleviate suffering in their circumstances. This man (pictured left), for example, was left with a disability following a stroke. We provided him with a wheelchair to help him regain some of the mobility and dignity that the stroke took from him. Many of those who come to us are referred by Hong Kong’s Social Welfare Department or by the city’s many non-profit organisations.

50 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


EVELOPMENT INSTRUMENTAL DONATION A young Hong Kong widow, struggling to manage after losing her husband to cancer, told us she desperately longed to find a piano for her talented young son. A devoted mother, she had organised piano lessons, subsidised at a cheap rate, and bought him a little battery operated keyboard. “He plays it like he’s addicted to it!” she told us. Clearly, though, as he learned more, it could not support his need to practise.

RAFTS

GLO

04,990 ped towards LIVES impacted in 2013

16,

endence in 2013

We don’t always have pianos in stock. The day before her visit, however, a piano had, as it happens, been donated to us. The timing was superb.

990 LIVES impacted in 2013

That’s one of the things we love about this work. Even a single donation, rightly placed, can be instrumental in another’s life. In this case, a young boy may see his talent flourish in ways that would otherwise be outside his reach.

ES impacted in 2013

GLOBAL HANDIC

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16,300

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Your gift o allows us

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40,000th

GLOBAL X-perience HK$23 HK$23 participant impacts one life

life one ce the impacts programmes began

$23

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14,675 STUDENTS

participated in

roads’ range of services, we saw 604,990 lives impacted cost of operations averaged $23 per individual life.

Your gift of $100 allows us to send

Your gift of $100 allows us to send

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102,670 1

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pa

23 natio

ss Crossroads’ range of services, we saw 604,990 lives impacted Global X-perience Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014 51 13. The cost of operations averaged $23 per individual life.

Gl

Full time team drawn from


FINANCES 2013 DIVISION ANALYSIS HK$’000 (surplus/(deficit))

Sales

Global Handicrafts World Village Marketplace

Global X-perience

note 1

note 2

Global Distribution

1,391.1

Less: Cost of Sales

902.4

Gross Margin on Trading

488.7

Donations & Other Revenue

Net Volunteer Support

1,190.5

300.7

306.7

2,163.3

Operating Expenses

60.8

735.7

4,277.1

Overhead Expenses

141.5

146.8

907.8

(14.3)

1.3

(7,348.2)

note 4

% of Revenue Value of Distribution Goods Multiple

note 5

9

notes 6,7

note 1: Crossroads Foundation Global Handicrafts World Village Marketplace operates on a fully fair trade basis through a Handicrafts shop and Cafe on site. The turnover and profitability has been increasing year on year, both ventures having the objective not only to cover their own costs, but ultimately to supplement the donation revenue and so directly contribute to impact the other divisions. In 2013, with a turnover of $1,391,100 and a gross profit of $488,700, the division incurred a deficiency of $14,300.

note 5:

note 4: Volunteer Support Costs cover provision of accommodation and hostel services for full time and short term volunteers, plus catering for community volunteers. Volunteer Support Donations raised by volunteers personally to support their involvement in Crossroads amounted to HK$2.0M in 2013.

2013 HK$’000

Donations and Other Revenue

6,416.2

Designated Donations

1,562.7 7,978.9

Trading Revenue Revenue bef. Vol. Support

note 2: During 2013 the Global X-perience division earned fees amounting to $1,195,500 sufficient to cover all direct and indirect operating expenses and to cover its proportion of overhead expenses. It produced a small surplus of $1,300. note 3: Donations Revenue includes designated contributions to support Global Distribution and special projects, major corporate donations plus general donations to support Crossroads’ day to day operations.

Total Revenue

Volunteer generated revenue

note 6:

2,581.6 10,560.5 1,995.5

Total Revenue

12,556.0

Total Expenses

2013 HK$’000

Cost of Sales

902.4

Operating Expenses

5,763.5

Overhead Expenses

1,605.3

Total Volunteer Support

5,412.3

Total Expenses

13,683.5

note 7: Crossroads shipped goods to the value of HK$64M in 2013. This reflects the value of goods that Crossroads distributes to the local community and by shipment to recipients globally. For every one dollar of cost, $9 in value is shipped and delivered to final beneficiaries.

52 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


Communication

Administration

Donations Revenue

Crossoads Foundation (HK)

note 3

note 5

1,391.1 902.4 488.7 7,978.9

9,169.4

301.3

344.8

3,416.8

304.9

385.0

5,763.5

105.6

303.6

1,605.3

(711.8)

(1,033.4)

5.7%

8.2%

7,978.9

(1,127.5)

604,990 LIVES impacted in 2013

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

53


FINANCES 2014 DIVISION ANALYSIS HK$’000 (surplus/(deficit))

Sales

Global Handicrafts World Village Marketplace

Global X-perience

note 1

note 2

Global Distribution

1,445.2

Less: Cost of Sales

843.2

Gross Margin on Trading

602.0

Donations & Other Revenue

Net Volunteer Support

1,728.1

302.0

292.8

2,000.6

Operating Expenses

51.8

471.9

4,238.8

Overhead Expenses

233.2

757.0

1,321.1

15.0

206.4

(7,560.5)

note 4

% of Revenue Value of Distribution Goods Multiple

note 5

9

notes 6,7

note 1: Crossroads Foundation Global Handicrafts World Village Marketplace operates on a fully fair trade basis through the Handicrafts shop and Cafe on site. During the 2014 year, these two entities generated $1,445,200 in gross revenue and contributed $602,000 on trading margin. The margin was sufficient to cover all operating and overhead expenses. The division is thus self-supporting.

note 5:

note 4: Volunteer Support Costs cover provision of accommodation and hostel services for full time and short term volunteers plus catering for community volunteers. Volunteer Support Donations raised by volunteers personally to support their involvement in Crossroads amounted to HK$2.8M in 2014.

2014 HK$’000

Donations and Other Revenue

10,753.3

Designated Donations

1,519.9 12,273.2

Trading Revenue

note 2: During 2014, the Global X-perience division generated revenue of $1,728,100. This was sufficient to cover all expenses, direct and indirect. The year-end net surplus for the division was $206,400. note 3: Donations Revenue includes designated contributions to support Global Distribution, and special projects, major corporate donations plus general donations to support Crossroads’ day to day operations.

Total Revenue

Revenue bef. Vol. Support Volunteer generated revenue

note 6:

3,173.3 15,446.5 2,801.6

Total Revenue

18,248.1

Total Expenses

2013 HK$’000

Cost of Sales

843.2

Operating Expenses

5,190.6

Overhead Expenses

3,469.6

Total Volunteer Support Total Expenses

6,085.5 15,588.9

note 7: Crossroads shipped goods to the value of HK$69M in 2014. This reflects the value of goods that Crossroads distributed to the local community and by shipment to recipients globally. For every $1 of cost, $9 in value is shipped and delivered to final beneficiaries.

54 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


Communication

Administration

Donations Revenue

Crossroads Foundation (HK)

note 3

note 5

1,445.2 843.2 602.0 14,001.3

12,273.2

267.3

421.2

3,283.9

89.6

338.5

5,190.6

478.7

679.6

3,469.6

(835.6)

(1,439.3)

4.6%

7.9%

12,273.2

2,659.2

Crossroads Foundation Sources of Revenue 2009-2013

EXPLANATORY COMMENTS ON SOURCES OF REVENUE

20.0

1. During 2010 a major one-off fundraiser was held. It alone generated $6 million which contributed significantly to the fund balance.

15.0

2. During 2011 the organisation felt the impact of the global banking financial issues which affected the organisation’s traditional donors. So, though the year resulted in a financial deficit, Crossroads had a sufficient fund balance to absorb it.

10.0

5.0

0.0

3. 2012 saw a gradual recovery in the income levels. The fund balances were still sufficient to absorb the reduced deficit for the year. 2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

-5.0

Major Fundraising Event

Vounteer Support

General Donations

Interest Income

Major Corporate

Surplus/Deficit

Trading Revenue

Designated & Specific Project

4. 2013 was notable for the major spike in designated income given, particularly for the Syrian refugee situation. The organisation began to focus on fund raising, which will increasingly become a factor in income generation. 5. The consistent trend of increasing trading revenue can be seen.

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

55


FUNDRAISING FABBAs helps transform Ugandan slum school It might not look like a treasure chest. But the 40 foot shipping container outside the only school in Kamwokya slum is filled with valuables that are changing Ugandan futures, one child at a time. Children in the densely packed, dangerous slum once had nowhere to go to

school, while their parents went to work in surrounding neighbourhoods. Now, this school is a beacon of hope, educating 2,000 pupils, not just in academic subjects but in life skills, job training, and children’s rights. They struggle with very few resources, though. We responded with the shipment sent by Fund

56 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Managers, Asian Bankers and Brokers Awards (FABBAs). As a result, the school library in Kamwokya is now filled with text books, the boys’ soccer team wears a uniform, the students sit at new desks and chairs, and some of the poorest students, who previously slept on the floor, now have soft new mattresses and warm blankets. All have a

new zeal to attend school each day. It’s FABBAs - our largest single donor in 13 years who made this possible. At their 2013 banquet, FABBAs raised a staggering HK$1.5 million for Crossroads’ operations and international shipments.


Mission Possible, a Hong Kong NGO, ran a fundraiser selling tickets to their box seats at the Hong Kong Rugby Sevens. The money they raised bought Crossroads a brand new forklift, and more!

ART AUCTION Bank of America Merrill Lynch donated more than 100 valuable artworks for an auction to benefit Crossroads. The pieces were part of a large donation of goods from the bank sparked by an innovative partnership with Crossroads, which forms part of BofAML’s efforts as a responsible company to help women and children in need (see page 38.)

A round of applause for Faust International Youth Theatre, who held a 24-hour rehearsal for their production to raise money for Crossroads in 2013.

Crossroads badly needed a new locker system to keep volunteer valuables safe while they worked. AsiaSat came to the rescue, donating funds to purchase new, secure lockers.

Now Crossroads volunteers can flush with pride, after Ladies’ Circle funded a massive renovation of our volunteer toilets! These long-time friends of Crossroads know the value of clean, useable facilities. Women from Ladies’ Circle have been volunteering in our stationery processing department as a group since 2000.

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OUR PEOPLE

Volunteers form the backbone of Crossroads’ work. From our kitchen manager to our clothing processing team, from our directors to our receptionists, all of our full time and part time staff work for no salary or remuneration. Residential staff, furthermore, raise funds to cover their own personal accommodation and living expenses. Over the course of 2013-2014, we had a total of 101 full time residential staff (averaging 60 at any one time), augmented by hundreds of community volunteers. These full time staff came from 22 countries: Australia, Cameroon, Canada, China, Finland, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Malawi, Malaysia, Mongolia, New Zealand, Nigeria, Philippines, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, UK, USA and Zambia.

58 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Hours served by community volunteers Crossroads has volunteers with differing physical and intellectual abilities, and strives to offer an inclusive, supportive and accessible environment for people of all abilities. Over the course of the Jan 2013 - June 2014 reporting period, our community volunteers clocked an incredible 148,905 hours of service. This includes both regular community volunteers and groups booking our volunteering programmes. Crossroads’ community volunteers more than double the effectiveness of our full time team, and we could not do the work of Crossroads without their massive effort!


Diversity of age, genders and abilities Crossroads is an inclusive work environment. We provide a workspace where men and women have equal opportunity for advancement. Working parents have considerable flexibility in their work schedule and on site care or schooling is offered for the children of full time staff. We have people of all ages volunteering at Crossroads, from school students, university students, young singles/ couples, families, middle aged singles/couples and retirees. No one is too young, nor too old, to help! Older full time staff are invited to work reduced hours, in accordance with their health and physical ability.

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014 59


OUR PEOPLE Who volunteers with us? Business people:

Companies often book team builds or offer individual staff who assist with either skilled volunteering (e.g. logisticians, engineers, designers, lawyers, accountants, architects, etc) or unskilled volunteering (e.g. to paint walls, tend gardens, load containers, pack goods, etc.)

Students: • Student service certificates: Students earn ‘Silver Certificates’ for 70 hours and ‘Gold Certificates’ for a further 70 hours. • Internships: Students over 16 undertake 6 weeks of full time volunteer service, during which they develop specialised skills in their designated area. • Field trips: Busloads of students come for regular field trips. • Curriculum participation: We are a weekly ‘subject’ on the curriculum of a selection of Hong Kong schools. • Offsite school projects: Schools undertake a wide range of projects, on their own premises, to support Crossroads’ work.

Community service groups:

Armed forces:

Community service groups such as religious groups or service clubs send groups for a day of volunteering or send individuals who become part of our regular weekly team.

Several navies e.g. US, UK, French and Australian, when in Hong Kong, send men and women for a day of community service. Some offer skilled volunteering, with expertise in logistics, IT, engineering, construction, etc. Others assist with general maintenance or warehouse needs.

Rehabilitation organisations: Rehabilitation organisations regularly bring out teams of people who are being rehabilitated, to help load a container, or take on other teamwork.

Salvation Army: The Salvation Army sends teams most days of the week.

Families: We are pleased to organise family days where parents and children serve together.

60 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


Individuals: Individuals from the Hong Kong community come and offer their time to volunteer.

What do volunteers do? We have tasks of all kinds: warehouse logistics, inventory management, sorting/processing of basic goods, checking of computer/electrical items, administration, accounting, public relations, communications, design, research, IT, translation, gardening, landscape care, tree care, hospitality, kitchen catering, retail services, product purchasing, barista services, handyman activities, catering, acting, set design, and more.

We give a standing ovation to all our incredible volunteers! We simply couldn’t exist without them!

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61


IN THE MEDIA 022net.com

Heute

Spiegel Online

Australian Network, AusBizAsia

Hollandse Nieuwe

忽然一周 Sudden Weekly

Hong Kong Commercial Daily

The Financial Times

BBC News

Hong Kong Economic Times

The Independent: Blogs

BBC World Service Business Matters

Huffington Post

The Telegraph

BBC World Service News Hour

i-Cable

Wall Street Journal

Irish Times

Wiener Zeitung

Lesechos

World Economic Forum Blog

Cable TV Chicago Tribune CNBC Daily Mirror deredactie.be Die Welt EXAME.com Fashion and Beauty Magazine

Oximity Produce Green Reuters RTHK Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen SCMP Speak HK

62 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

63


GET CONNECTED We live in a needy world. As our name suggests, we are a crossroads that connects people in need with people who can help. How can we help you? Or how can you help us? These pages describe what you can do through Crossroads.

Donate Goods Would you like to donate goods for people in need? We redistribute quality goods from families, hotels, hospitals, businesses, educational institutions and more. If your surplus goods can help people in need, we would be delighted to send them on.

Types of goods we accept • Books & AV materials • Building materials • Child playground/ orphanage equipment • Computers • Educational furnishings • Educational toys • Electrical goods • Exercise & physical therapy equipment • Food

• Household goods • Medical equipment & supplies • Musical instruments • New clothing • Office appliances • Office furniture • Stationery supplies • Tools • Vehicles • White goods/appliances

Request Goods If you need donated goods from our warehouse, we’d love you to tell us. We give goods to non-profit groups here in Hong Kong and overseas, along with people who apply through the Hong Kong Social Welfare Department.

Organisations we resource • Leadership training

• Animal welfare

– pre-school, primary, secondary & tertiary

• Medical clinics & hospitals

•S ports programmes for the disadvantaged

• Care for people at risk

• Elderly care

• Microbusiness initiatives

•S uicide prevention services

• Community development

• Environmental care

• Orphanages

•S upport for new arrivals

• Computer training centres

• Eye clinics

• Prisoner care

• Cultural needs

• Fair trade initiatives

• Refugee & IDP programmes

• Dental clinics

• Family services

• Disaster response

• Halfway houses

• Rehabilitation and therapy centres

•S upport for special needs: autism, epilepsy, people with disabilities

• Drug rehabilitation services

• HIV/AIDS support

• Service organisations

• Educational institutions

• Hygiene programmes

• Adoption agencies

64 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

•S upport for women • Vocational training programmes • Youth services


Donate Funds Would you like to help financially? We can multiply the donation of dollars given. For every $23 we receive, we can impact a life. For every $100 given, we can send help worth $900.

We would deeply appreciate your regular donations, fundraising support, or sponsorship.

Donate Time and Talent Your time, talents, and skills can provide vital help, especially when given regularly by individuals or teams. We have a full time team of volunteers but we cannot do this work alone. When volunteers come to us on a regular basis, bringing their talents and skill sets, we can see many more people helped.

Skills we need • Accounting

• Driving

• Administration/ office work

• Electrical work

• IT and software development • Medical equipment

• Barista work in cafe

• Environmental work • Fair trade market

• Building projects

• Fork lift driving

• Reception

• Carpentry

• Fundraising

• Sewing

• Catering/cooking

• Furniture repair

• Translation

• Computers

• Gardening

• Container loading

• Goods collection

• Warehousing and stock movement

• Creative design & artwork

• Handyman/ maintenance jobs

• Photography

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

65


Book an X-perience Deepen your understanding by taking a few steps ‘in the shoes’ of people battling the major issues which face our world today. We have a range of options you may book as an individual or group.

WAR: REFUGEE RUN HEALTH: HIV/AIDS VISUAL IMPAIRMENT: BLIND X-PERIENCE

POVERTY: STRUGGLE FOR SURVIVAL

HUNGER: SOME, TONNES, NONE

WATER NEEDS: CHALLENGE OF WATER

FAIR TRADE: COFFEE BEAN TRADE

66 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

And more...


Find Partners/Projects Ask us about projects or partnership opportunities for NGOs and companies. We help ‘match-make’ in Hong Kong and around the world. Advocacy

Microcredit

Corporate Social Responsibility

Philanthropy

Corporate volunteering

Services-in-kind

Disaster response

Social entrepreneurship

Doing business with the poor

Sustainable development

Fair trade Gifts-in-kind Guidelines/Best practice

Poverty alleviation

We help match for-profits, non-profits, foundations, trusts, governments, diplomats, and more.

Humanitarian aid Job creation

Shop ‘n Snack Empower people in poverty by buying their products at our fair trade marketplace and cafe. We sell products from people living in low income areas. Every sale helps give them a more secure future. You can buy chocolate, tea/coffee, snacks, spices, jewellery, scarves, bags, carvings, toys, accessories, stationery, homeware, and much more. Come in and browse around. You can even do your Christmas shopping! The products come from all regions of the world: Asia, Europe, Africa, the Americas, and the Middle East. Visit our fair trade facilities, shop in our Global Handicrafts marketplace and be refreshed in our Silk Road Cafe!

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014 67


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! 1st Hong Kong Canadian Cub Scouts

Adphocase Studio

3G Sourcing, LLC

Advanced Learning Systems

4M Industrial Development Ltd. 5 Star Jewellery 5.11 Sourcing Ltd. 6waves Ltd. The ABM HK Swatow Baptist Church Community Service Assoc Ltd.

Ad-Prom Specialty Ltd. The Advantage Trust Advendise Ltd. Aeolus(Asia)Ltd. Aerobag Company Ltd. Afasia Fashions (HK) Ltd. Ah Ngau Engineering Ltd.

American International School of Guangzhou

Aspect Asia

American President Lines Co. Pvt. Ltd.

Association Concerning Sexual Violence Against Women

American Women’s Association of Hong Kong Ltd.

Aston Wilson Ltd.

The Amity Foundation The Ammado Foundation Amorepacific Andy World Club Ltd.

ABN-AMRO Bank

Aids Concern

ABWE Shing Yan Christian Social Service Centre

Air China

Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) Singapore

Air India

Ann Taylor Sourcing Far East Ltd.

A.D. & F.D. of Pok Oi Hospital Mrs Cheng Yam On School

Air New Zealand

Apax Group

A.D.E.C. Mood Disorder Integrated Center

Air Niugini

Apax Partners Hong Kong Ltd.

Airport Authority Hong Kong

APEX 88 Ltd.

Alcanta International College, China

Apple & Pie Ltd.

ADRA Australia AEON AFS Hong Kong

Alcatel-Lucent Alex Chu & Associates Ltd.

Aqua Pure Distilled Water Co. Ltd.

Associated Sisters in Asia

Atlas Enterprises Ltd. Atlas Global Atlas Impex Atlassian ATOFINA Greater China Trading Co. Ltd. Audio Electronics Augusta Jones Ltd. Aussco HK Ltd. Austrade Hong Kong Australia-China Endeavour The Australian Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong Australian Consulate General

Alex Ho Associates Ltd.

Arboricultural Society of Hong Kong

Alexander Stuart Designs Ltd.

Arcfoto Photography

Aliaba.com Hong Kong Ltd.

Ardex Hong Kong Ltd.

Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole Hospital

Arena Enterprises Ltd.

All Souls Church, UK All Star Sports Association Ltd.

Argyll Scott International (HK) Ltd.

Allen & Overy

The Ark Veterinary Clinic

Avery Dennison

A & L (Asia) International Ltd.

Allens

Armstrong-Hilton Ltd.

Aztec Information Services

A & P International Ltd.

Allerhand Asia Ltd.

The Arnhold Group

Azure Tax Ltd.

APT Design Co.

Alliance Global Serve

Arup

B & J Ford

A. S. Watson & Co. Ltd.

Alliance Francaise

Ashoka Trading Ltd.

BAA

ASrIA

Alliance International Church

Ashurst Hong Kong

BAX Global Hong Kong

AT & T Global Network Services Hong Kong Ltd.

Alliance Primary School Kowloon Tong

Asia Airfreight Terminal

BCJ Joint Ventures

Asia Brokers Charity Ltd.

BDO Ltd.

A Triad Garment Factory

Allianz Global Investors Hong Kong Ltd.

Asia Centre for Mobilisation (HK) Ltd.

BIS Hong Kong

Allied Pickfords Ltd.

Asia Goal Ltd.

Alpha Academy Ltd.

Asia Line Ltd.

BNP Paribas

Absolute Trade Co.

Alpha Bright Ltd.

Asia Pacific Inspection Ltd.

Accenture

Alpha Centre for the Gifted

Acceptor Professional Directors

Alpha Epsilon Chi, GCC, USA

Asia Satellite Telecommunications Co. Ltd.

Access (Asia) Co. Ltd.

Alpha Technics Asia Ltd.

Asia Securities Global Ltd.

Acme Fashion Works Ltd.

Alstom Hong Kong Ltd.

Asia Terminals Ltd.

ACME Landis Operations Holding Ltd.

Amasse Capital Ltd.

Asian Artworks Gallery

Babtie BMT Harris & Sutherland (HK) Ltd.

The Ambition Group Ltd.

Asian Corporate Services Ltd.

Baby Express

Acton Freight International Ltd.

Asian Games Marketing Ltd.

Baker & McKenzie

Addison Ltd.

The American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong

Asian Quality Assurance

Balli Steel Asia Ltd.

ADesiflava

The American Club

Asian Tigers K. C. Dat

Bally Hong Kong Ltd.

adidas Group

American Design

AsiaNet Consultants

Adoptive Families of Hong Kong

American International School

AsiaXPAT.com Ltd.

BALtrans International Moving Ltd.

AIC Merchandizing (Japan) Ltd. AIESEC in the Chinese University of Hong Kong AIG Finance (HK) Ltd. A. J. Vachha & Company A. M. International Manufactory Co. Ltd. (HK) AMEC ANZ Banking Group Ltd.

Aaron Shum Jewelery Ltd. Abbotsleigh, Australia Abertay Ltd.

68 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Argos Pacific Logistics Ltd.

Australian International School Hong Kong Australian Navy Australian Opal Cutters, Australia Autism Partnership Primary School Autumn Rain

BMT Asia Pacific Ltd. BNY Mellon BSI Ltd. Babe Ltd. Babies Trendland Ltd. Babisil Products Company Ltd.


Bamboo

Bird and Bird Solicitors

Brownie Guides

Bamboo Republic

Bisous Hong Kong

Bryan Cave

Bangor Worldwide Missionary Convention

Black Castle Ltd.

Buddhist Chi Hong Chi Lam Memorial College

CMG Asia Ltd.

Buddhist Hung Sean Chau Memorial College

CNN (Cable News International, Inc.)

Buddhist Leung Chik Wai College

COSCO

The Blues Filobranca

Buddhist Li Chong Yuet Ming Nursing Home for the Elderly

CPS Group Ltd.

Bobtex (Far East) Ltd.

Buddhist Po Kwong School

The Body Shop

Buddhist Sin Tak College

Barclays Capital Asia Ltd.

Boehringer Ingelheim Hong Kong Ltd.

Barker College, Australia

Buddhist Sum Heung Lam Memorial College

Bondex International HK Ltd.

Buddhist Sum Ma Shui Ying

CTS (Cargo) Hong Kong Ltd.

Barmag Far East Ltd.

Bonnie Blair Ltd.

Barnabas Charitable Service Association

Buddhist Tai Hung College

Bookazine Boom Solutions Ltd.

Buddhist Wong Fung Ling College

CUHK FAA Thomas Cheung Secondary School

Bootham School

Bühler Hong Kong

Caffe Perla Mora Asia

Bosideng International Holdings Ltd.

Buick Management Limited

California Fitness

Bumps to Babes

Cambridge Nursing Home

The Boston Consulting Group

Burberry Asia Ltd.

CamelBak Products, LLC, USA

The Boys’ Brigade, Hong Kong

Business Environment Council

Camelpaint Chemicals Co. Ltd.

Bradbury School

Butterfly Bay Baptist Church Social Centre for the Elderly

Canadian International School

Brand Effect Companies Brandstorm Hong Kong Ltd.

BUZdesign Consultants

Beatitudes Drama Society

CancerLink

Branford Ltd.

ByBodyguard Ltd.

Beaver Scouts

c.i.p (Asia) Ltd.

Canossa College

Branson Ultrasonics (A/P) Co. Ltd. Breakthrough Ltd.

Black Isle Consultants

Bank of China (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Bliss & Wisdom Fund Ltd.

Baptist Lui Ming Choi Secondary School

Bloomberg L.P.

Baptist Wing Lung Secondary School

Blue Star Ltd.

Baptista Szeretetszolgalat Bar 109 Bar U Restaurant

Basic Point Basicline International Ltd. Bates Wells & Braithwaite London LLP, UK Bauhinia School Bayer MaterialScience Ltd. Beachside Building Services Beacon Hill School

Beijing Datang Power Generation Co. Ltd.

Bloomsbury Books Ltd.

C3 Church Hong Kong

CMA Choi Cheung Kok Secondary School CMS Cameron McKenna

CP Ships CSC CSL Ltd. CSM CST Capital Ltd.

Café Colorado

Canadian Tire Corporation, Ltd.

Canossa Hospital Canossian Girls School

Belfuse Ltd.

Breakthrough Youth Village

CCC Cheung Sha Wan Kei To Church

Belilios Public School

Brecon Ltd.

CCC Heep Woh College

Belkin Asia Pacific Ltd.

Brent Industrial Corporation

CCC Hoh Fuk Tong College

The Capital Group Companies Hong Kong Office

Bellanis Ltd.

Brigantine Services Ltd.

CCC Kei To Mongkok Church

Capital Lease Ltd.

Benetton Asia Pacific Ltd.

Bright Kingdom Development Ltd.

CCC Kei Wai Primary School (Ma Wan)

Capricorn Apparel Ltd.

Berytos International Trading (HK) Ltd.

Bright Light Ltd.

CCC Kwei Wah Shan College

Bright Services Co. Ltd.

CCC Ming Kei College

Best Wishes Company Ltd.

Brilliant Global Ltd.

CCC Ming Yin College

Best Young International Ltd.

Brilliant Standard Ltd.

CCC Mong Man Wai College

Bestpo Enterprises Ltd.

Brio International Ltd.

Bethel Christian Fellowship, Australia

British Airways World Cargo

CCC Mongkok Church Kai Oi School

Berger Paints (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Capital (CMC) Management Consultants Ltd.

Capstone Captivating International Caravel Group Ltd. Care for Children Caritas Bianchi College of Careers Caritas Dr. & Mrs. Olinto De Sousa Family Service (Shatin)

The British Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong

CCC Yenching College

The Better ‘Ole Bar and Restaurant

British Consulate-General

CFT Engineering Ltd.

The British Council

CITA International Ltd.

Caritas Fanling Chan Chun Ha Secondary School

Betterware

British Mediterranean, UK

CJP (HK) Ltd.

Caritas Fu Tung Home

Beyond the Fringe Hairdressing

British Navy

CLP Group

Beyond the Pivot

British Rollmakers (China) Ltd.

CLSA Hong Kong

Caritas Integrated Service for Young People - Tak Tin

Big Apple Ltd.

Broadway Photo Supply

C&M Faith Memorial Church

Caritas Lok Yi School

Bilkey Llinas Design Ltd.

Broadway Trading Co.

CM Holdings Ltd.

Caritas Medical Centre

Bio-Supplies Ltd.

Broadwood Ltd.

CMA CGM

Caritas Social Work Service

Bethel College, USA

CDS Overseas

Caritas Evergreen Home

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

69


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! Caritas Tuen Mun Marden Foundation Secondary School

Cheshire Home

Choy Chan Timber Mill

Clover Seed Co. Ltd.

Cheterson & Co.

Chrisdon Trading Co. Ltd.

Coastal Connections Ltd.

Caritas Yuen Long Chan Chun Ha Secondary School

Cheung Sha Wan Catholic Secondary School

Christ Church St Ives, Australia

CO2nnsulting Ltd.

Carmel Bunnan Tong Memorial Secondary School

Christ College

Co-China

Chi Tad Industrial (HK) Ltd.

Christar Hong Kong Ltd.

Chiangs Optical

Christchurch Kindergarten

Coffee Concepts (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Carmel Secondary School

Chiaphua Components Holdings Ltd.

Christian Action School

Carrefour Global Sourcing Asia Ltd.

Chiaphua Industries Ltd.

Christian Alliance College

Coffs Harbour Carpet Court, Australia

Christian Alliance International School (CAIS)

Cognitio College (Hong Kong) Color 6 Laboratories Ltd.

Christian Alliance P. C. Lau Memorial International School

Colour Bar Salon

Childprufe (HK) Ltd. Children at 818

Christian Disciples Church Christian Family Service Centre

Columbia Sportswear Co (HK) Ltd.

Casio Computer (HK) Ltd.

Children’s Hope Fund Hong Kong

Castaways

Children’s Medical Foundation

Castores Magi (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Childz Play

Cathay Holidays Ltd.

Carmel Pak U Secondary School

Carromco-Sport-Games Cartier Cartorama (HK) Ltd. CASH E-Trade Ltd.

Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. Catholic Joint School of Tuen Mun and Yuen Long

Chicago Capital Ltd. Chilab Ltd.

Commonwealth Optical Manufactory Ltd.

Chiling & Co. Ltd.

Chu Yu Transportation Co. Ltd.

Community Advice Bureau

China Aerospace Telecommunications Ltd.

Chubb Hong Kong Ltd.

Community Business Ltd.

Chung Shing Hong Rice Co., Ltd.

China Coast Community Ltd.

Chung Sing Benevolent Society Mrs Aw Boon Haw Secondary School

The Community Chest of Hong Kong

China Compass Publishing

Cazenova Capital Management Ltd.

China Congregational Church

Cedar Fund Ltd. Celebrity Exports Ltd. Celki Medical Company

China Lilanz Ltd.

Church Assembly Hall

China National Aviation Corporation Hong Kong Ltd.

Church of All Nations

Compassion International (East Asia) Ltd.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

Concord Co.

Central Plaza Management Co. Ltd.

China Power International Development Company

Century First Manufacturing Ltd.

Chinaplay Ltd.

Chabad of Hong Kong

ChinaVest Services Ltd.

Chai Wan Baptist Church

Chinawood Associates

Chan Sui Ki (La Salle) College

Chinese Christian Association

Chanel Ltd.

Chinese Christian Mong Man Wei School

Charlies International Charlotte Travel Charming-Lite Manufacturing Co. Ltd. Charter Rich Corp Ltd. Chartered Institute of Management Accountants The Chase Manhattan Bank

Community Education and Resource Centre

China Holiness College

Central Conference Center

Charitable Choice

Community Church Hong Kong

Chunkie International Removal Ltd.

China Orchid Energy Resources Ltd.

Chan’s Creative School

Comgest Far East Ltd.

Chu Kong Plan

Catholic Women’s League

The Cecilian Singers

Christian Siu Ming Catholic Secondary School

Colourful Workshop

The Chinese Foundation Secondary School Chinese International School The Chinese Rhenish Church Hong Kong Sze Tian Rhenish Home for the Elderly The Chinese University of Hong Kong Chinese YMCA

Cigna Cinox (Hong Kong) Ltd. Cipher International Ltd.

Commverge Solutions Ltd.

Concordia International School Concordia International School Shanghai

Cisco Systems Hong Kong Ltd.

Concordia Lutheran School (North Point)

Citadines Hongkong Ashley

Connaught Travel

Citibank N.A. Hong Kong

Conrad International Hong Kong

Citigroup Hong Kong

Consolidated Textiles

City Garden Hotel

Construction Industry Council Training Academy

City Telecom (HK) Ltd. City University of Hong Kong Civil Service Training and Development Institute

Consulate General of Argentine Republic Consulate General of Belgium

CLARES

Consulate General of Canada

Clariant (China) Ltd. Clarins

Consulate General of Switzerland

Classic Packing & Removal Co. Ltd.

Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany Consulate General of the Republic of Kazakhstan

Chef Gardens

Ching Chung Hau Po Woon Secondary School

Classic Supplies Co. Ltd.

Chen Yet-Sen Family Foundation

Chinook Society

Consulate General of Uruguay

Chengdu International School

CLOSTERMANN Design

Chiu Lut Sau Memorial Secondary School

Clothing Solutions International (HK) Ltd.

Container Providers Intl. Ltd.

Chenille (HK) Ltd.

Contempo

Chesga Ltd.

Choi Designs

Cloudvault (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Continental Airlines

70 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Clearwater Bay School


The Cookware Company

Danish Seamen’s Church

Copycat Shoes Manufacturing Ltd.

Danzas AEI (HK) Ltd.

Discovery Bay International School

Early Learning Centre (HK) Ltd.

Discovery Bay Optical Shop

Earth Buddy Earthy Publications

Earnward Warehouse Ltd.

Cornwall School

Darling Child International Kindergarten

Corp 8

Darton Ltd.

Discovery Bay Pirates Rugby Club

Corporate Service Group

Davis Polk & Wardwell

Discovery College

Cosy Zone

Debenhams PLC

Displaytech Ltd.

Cotton Spinners Association Secondary School

Deborah International Play School

District Distributions Co. Ltd. Dolly Expo Far East Ltd.

EastPoint Property Management Service Ltd.

Country Garden School Guangzhou

Deborah Oppenheimer International

Donald Chiu Photography

Easyfill International Co. Ltd.

Coutts Bank

Debt Traders Ltd.

Dong Rong Electronics Co. Ltd.

Eaton House Hong Kong

Covenant Church, USA

Dechert

Dong Woo Shipping Co. Ltd.

Eaton Smart Hong Kong

Crafts Hong Kong

Dehres International Ltd.

Dongguan Luen Thai Garment Co. Ltd.

Eban International Ltd.

Creata Promotion (Asia) Ltd.

Delia Memorial School

Door of Faith - HK Mission

Creation Maternity

Delia School of Canada

Ecovision Asia Ltd.

Douceur International Ltd.

Creative Consulting Group

Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, CPA

Eddie Bauer International Ltd.

Doulos

Creative Kindergarten

Delphi Ltd.

Edipresse Hong Kong Ltd.

Dowell Trading Co.

Creative Primary School

Delta Electrical & Engineering Services Ltd.

Downton Baptist Church, UK

Education Development Platform Ltd.

Denton Wilde Sapte

Dr. Kong Footcare Ltd.

Educational Perspective

Dragonair

Ege Besin Co. Ltd.

Drake International

eGenix.com Software GmbH

Drake Overload Ltd.

Elco

Dresdner Bank

Elegance Industrial Co. Ltd.

Du Pont China Ltd. Duchess of Kent Hospital

Elegance Optical Manufactory Ltd.

Dunham Bush Services Co. Ltd.

Elegant Fashion Enterprise Ltd.

Duquesne Capital Asia

Elegant Handicraft Ltd.

Dussman Service Hong Kong Ltd.

Elim Development Ltd.

Dymocks EC Harris

Elsevier Health Services Asia Pacific

ECCO

Emerson Electric Asia-Pacific

Digital Eye

EDS Asia

Emirates Airline

EFT (HK) Ltd.

Emmanuel Church, Redditch, UK

DFS Group Ltd.

Diligent Group & Diligent Factory

EK Investment Management Ltd.

Emperor Hotel

DHL International (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Dimple’s International

ELCHK Tai Wo Integrated Youth Service Centre

Empire Toys (HK) Ltd.

ELCHK Tin Shui Wai Integrated Youth Service Centre

Enlighten Hong Kong - Action for Epilepsy

ELCHK Yuen Long Lutheran Seconday School

Elizabeth Homes

EMI Music Publishing Asia

Entertainment+Culture Advisors

EP Power Company Ltd. EPS & Little Flowers Grass

Environment Protection Department

EPSON Hong Kong Ltd.

The Empire Hotels and Resorts

ESL Asia Com

Equinix Hong Kong

E.Sun Commercial Bank

Equity Trust Hong Kong

Creative Primary School’s Kindergarten Creative Secondary School

Design for Change

Credit Suisse Group

Design Link Company Ltd.

Crocodile Clothing Ltd.

Designer Workshop Ltd.

C-Room Production Co. Crowe Horwath (HK) CPA Ltd.

Destiny Wellbeing CentreNeutral Bay

Crown Worldwide Holdings, Ltd.

Deutsche Bank AG

Crystal Apparel Ltd.

Deutsche Investments Hong Kong Ltd.

Crystal Computer Services Crystal Group Culture Technology Ltd. Cuttan Company Ltd. Cybelle Ltd. DBS Bank DDI International Ltd.

DMB & B DMHC Siu Ming Catholic Secondary School DMK Asia Ltd. DMV International Ltd. DP World Asia-Pacific DSV Air & Sea Ltd. DTZ Dah Chong Hong Ltd.

Dexion (North Asia) Ltd. Diageo plc Dick Smith Electronics, Australia Dick’s Sporting Goods International Ltd.

Dinchack Diocesan Boys’ School Diocesan Girls’ Junior School Diocesan Girls’ School Diocesan Pastoral Centre for Workers Diocesan Youth Commission Direct Marketing of Asia Ltd. Direct Sales Ltd.

Eastern Force Computer Ltd. Eastern Worldwide Company Ltd.

The Economist

Elite Concepts

Employees Retraining Board

Enseng (HK) Ltd.

The Dairy Farm Company Ltd.

Discovery Bay Community Groups

Dama Kaya Society

Discovery Bay Girl Guides

E-Tech Management (HK) Ltd.

Ernest Maude

Discovery Bay International Community Church

Eageract Company

Esquel Group

Eagles Mount Adventures Ltd.

Esso Hong Kong Ltd.

Damrak Co. Ltd. Dana Corporation

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

71


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! Estate Agents Authority

Far East Access

Foundation Techniques Ltd.

German Speaking Ladies Group

Etcetera Ltd.

Far East Foundation Co. Ltd.

Etex (Far East) Ltd.

German Swiss International School

Ethiopian Airlines

Far East Masonic Association for Charities

Four Seas Container Transport Co. Ltd. Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts

Gingers

Ethos International

Far East Media (HK) Ltd.

Four Winds Removals Ltd.

Gingko Biloba Ltd.

Eureka Language Education Centre

Farfalla Ltd.

Fox International Channels

Girl Scouts of America

Farris Associates Ltd.

Framatome Connectors (HK) Ltd.

Glenealy School

EUROGROUP Far East Ltd.

Fashion Box (H.K.) Ltd.

Free Methodist Church

Glimpso HK Ltd.

European Commission Office in Hong Kong

Fashion Focus Manufacturing. Ltd.

French International School

Global Asset Management (HK) Ltd.

Evangelical Community Church

Fashion Linq Hong Kong Ltd.

Global Development Group

The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hong Kong

Fat Angelo’s Italian Restaurant

Frenchs Forest Baptist Church, Australia

Global Exports HK

Evans & Peck

Federal Express

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

Feducia Ltd.

Friends of Hong Kong Charities

Global Ideas, Inc., USA

Feeding Hong Kong

Friends of LSE Hong Kong

Global Industrial (HK) Ltd.

Fellowship Daniel, Tai Po Peace Evangelical Centre

Friends of the Earth (HK)

Global Procurement Hong Kong

Ever Spirit Ltd.

Frontiers

Everbest Technologies Ltd.

Fems International Ltd.

Frontline Clothing Ltd.

Global Settlements Hong Kong Ltd.

Evercore Aisa Ltd.

Ferrero Asia Ltd.

Fu Hong Society

Global Sources

Evergreen International Airlines

Fidelity Investments Management (HK) Ltd.

Fu Lam Village Restaurant

Globe Audio International Ltd.

Evergreen Recycling

Fuji Photo Products Co., Ltd.

Globelink International Pty Ltd.

Exacta Sweaters Ltd.

Fidessa Ltd.

Fuji Xerox (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Excel Asia Ltd.

Fiducia Management Consultants

Fukien Secondary School

Glorious Praise Fellowship HK Ltd.

Evelyn B Fashion Ever Rich HK Industrial Co. Ltd.

The Excelsior Hotel

French Navy

Exclusively Mine Lingerie & Couture House

The Film Factory Ltd.

Fung Yui King International School

Fine Columbian Emerald HK Co.

Furama Hotel HK

Executive Access Ltd.

Fine Gift Creation Ind’l Company

Fuschia Ltd.

Exel Hong Kong Ltd.

Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Mission

G-Creation Ltd.

First Place Advertising Agents Ltd.

GfK Marketing Services Ltd.

Exodus Team, UK Expeditors HK Ltd. Express by Holiday Inn Extensive Trading Co. Ltd. FABBAS FJ Hong Kong Ltd. F.O.C.U.S. FTI Consulting (Hong Kong) Ltd. FTL International Ltd. The Fan Family Charitable Trust Fair Trade Hong Kong Fairform Mfg. Co. Ltd. FAIRTASTE Fairton International Group Ltd. Faith Community Church Faith Love Lutheran Church Fame Concept International Ltd. Fame Gain International Development Ltd.

Firwood Furniture Fitness First (Hong Kong) Ltd. Five Loaves Ministries

GE International Inc. GL events Hong Kong Ltd. GL Trade Asia Ltd. G.M. Orient G.O.D. Ltd.

Global Equity Brokers

Glory Overseas Ltd. Gloss Mind Sports International Ltd. Go Consulting Pty. Ltd. Go Inside Café Goethe Institut Hong Kong Gold Coast Yacht and Country Club Gold Star Line Ltd. Golden Champion Corporation Ltd.

G-Set English Centre

Golden Emblem Investment Co. Ltd.

Gainbridge Ltd.

Golden Mountain Trading

Gakken (HK) Company Ltd.

Golden-Mine Co.

Gala Garment Factory

Goldlion (Far East) Ltd.

Gammon Construction Ltd.

Goldman Sachs

Fondgear Co. Ltd.

GAP International Sourcing (Holdings) Ltd.

Goldride Management Services Ltd.

Fook Yee Garden Management Office

Gard Hong Kong Ltd.

Golin/Harris Forrest (Hong Kong)

Foot Tech International Co. Ltd.

Garden Gallery Ltd.

Good Copy Printing Co.

Gateway Apartments

The Good Design Co. Ltd.

Gateway Hotel

Good Health Kindergarten

Gaw Capital

Good Health School

General Lion Footwear Co. Ltd.

Good Hope School

George Strome, Architect

The Good Lab Foundation Ltd.

Geometry Global

Good Shephard Sisters - Our Lady’s Hostel

Five Star Asia Ltd. Flex-Box Fluid HK Ltd. Focolare Movement Fok & Johnson Solicitors Fok On Church, Elderly Centre

Footstar HK Ltd. Footstop Force Engineering Company

Family Planning Association of Hong Kong

Formable Industrial Ltd.

Fanling Golf Club

Fortune Provider Ltd.

Fantasma Co.

Fosroc Hong Kong Ltd.

Fortune Engineering Co.

72 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

German Speaking Evangelical Lutheran Congregation in HK

Good-Care Int’l Movers Co.


The Harbour School

Hi-Watt Battery Industry Co., Ltd.

Goodwin Curtains

HKBUAS Wong Kam Fai Primary and Secondary School

Harbourview Horizon Hotel

Goodwood Investment Ltd.

HKCAAVQ

Hard Rock Café

Ho Koon Nature Education cum Astronomical Centre

Gordon Baptist Church, Australia

HKCWC Fung Yiu King Memorial Secondary School

Hariaum Apparel Manufacturing Ltd.

Ho Tung Home for the Elderly

HKEC Elite Kindergarten

Harmony House Ltd.

Hodes Weill Asia Ltd.

HKFEW Wong Cho Bau Primary School

HarperCollins Publishers

Hogan Lovells

HKFEW Wong Cho Bau Secondary School

Harrow International School Harvey Norman, Australia

Hoi Pa Street Government Primary School

Goodwell Sam Cheong Grocery

Gouten Consulting Ltd. Government Property Agency Government Secretariat Home Affairs Bureau Government Supplies Depot Grace Baptist Church Grace Charity Foundations Grace Fellowship Grameen Foundation

HKFYG Youth S.P.O.T. HKSKH Lady MacLehose Centre HKSKH Lady MacLehose Centre (Shek Yam) Kindergarten

Hasbro Far East Ltd. Haven Books Haven of Hope Hospital Haven of Hope Nursing Home

Ho, Sneddon, Chow CPA Ltd.

Hoi Ping Chamber of Commerce Secondary School Hoi Sing and Philip Movers Co. Ltd. Hoi Yu Transportation Ltd.

HKSKH Tung Chung Intergrated Service

Haworth Hong Kong

HKSYCIA Wong ai Shan Memorial College

Haywood International Financial Planning Ltd.

HKTA Tang Hin Memorial Secondary School

Headland Hotel

HKU SPACE

Heath Wallace (HK) Ltd.

HP Enterprise Services

Hebron Baptist Church

HS & A Ltd.

Hee-na Circle

HSBC

Heep Hong Society

HSBC Property (Asia) Ltd.

Heep Yunn Primary School

green2greener

HYLA Hong Kong

Hong Chi Lei Muk Shue Centre cum Hostel

Heifer International Hong Kong

Hong Chi Morninghill School

Greenfield English (International) Kindergarten & Nursery

Hacis

Heinz Hong Kong Ltd.

Hallmark Cards (HK) Ltd.

The Helena May

Hong Chi Pinehill Advanced Training Centre

Hamburg Süd

Greenleaves Kindergarten

Hellmann Worldwide Logistics Ltd.

Greenwood Trading Co. Ltd.

Hang Cheong Building Materials Supplies Co. Ltd.

Group MAD

Hang Hing Company

Helping Hands, Inc., USA

Grown Up Manufactory Ltd.

Hang Lung Properties

Heng On Baptist Nursery

Hong Kong Academy Primary School

Guangzhou Nanhu International School

Hang Lung Real Estate Agency Ltd.

Henry Ansbacher

Hong Kong Adventist College

Hang Sun Button Manufactory Ltd.

Henry Gain Far East Ltd.

Hong Kong Adventist Hospital

Guanhong International Group Ltd.

Hephzibah Evangelistic Centre

Hong Kong Adventure Corps

Guardforce Ltd.

Hang Yee House Material and Committee

Herb King Pharmacy

Hong Kong Aero Engine Services Ltd.

Grand Hotel Hungaria, Hungry Grand Hyatt Hong Kong Grand Pacific Technology Ltd. Grand Step Hong Kong Ltd. Granirex, Canada Grant Thornton Grapevine International Ltd. Great Eagle Hotel Great Liaison Ltd. The Green Valley Youth Choir, Australia

Gucci Group Guest Supply Asia Ltd.

Hangyue Material Support & Engine LTM

Haymarket Media Ltd.

Health Gate

Hello!

Heritas Advisors Ltd. Hermes Greater China Ltd.

Holiday Inn Golden Mile Holistic Education Association Holy Spirit Seminary Home Essentials Home of Loving Faithfulness Honeytone Ltd. Honeyville Canossian Retreat House Hong Chi Fu Heng Hostel

Hong Kong Academy Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts

Hong Kong Air Cargo Terminals Ltd.

Hanjin Shipping Co. Ltd.

Hermes-OTTO International Hong Kong

Hanlun Habitats Ltd.

Hewlett-Packard HK SAR Ltd.

Hansard Development Services (Far East) Ltd.

High Rock Christian Centre

Hapag-Lloyd (China) Ltd.

Hill & Knowlton Asia Ltd.

Haputex

Hillman Orient Ltd.

HIT English Club

Hapworld SDL Ltd.

Hillpop Knitters

Hong Kong Baptist Church St Andrew’s Fellowship

HK Amateur Radio Transmitting Society

Harbour City Estates Ltd.

Hind Group

Hong Kong Baptist Hospital

Harbour Plaza Hotel

Hip Hing Construction Co. Ltd.

HK Wheelchair Aid Service

Harbour Plaza Metropolis Hotel

Hip Shing Hong Group

Hong Kong Baptist Theological Seminary

HKACE Joint Venture

Harbour Plaza North Point

Hipp.fish Salon

Hong Kong Baptist University

Guideposts Kindergarten Gwailo Coolies H & M Hennes & Mauritz (Far East) Ltd. H Daya HAECO (Hong Kong Aircraft Engineering Co. Ltd.)

Highgate House School

Hong Kong Airlines Hong Kong Airport Services Ltd. Hong Kong Association of Gerontology Hong Kong Aviation Group Hong Kong Bankers Club

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

73


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! Hong Kong Blind Sports Association Ltd.

The Hong Kong Institute of Education

The Hong Kong St Andrew’s Society

Hy-pro Asia Ltd.

Hong Kong Broadband Network Ltd.

Hong Kong Institute of Marketing (HKIM)

Hong Kong Society of Accountants

Hyundai Merchant Marine (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Hong Kong Buddhist Association Children & Youth Centre

Hong Kong Institute of Real Estate

Hong Kong Society for the Protection of Children

IBI Hong Kong

Hong Kong Institute of Vocational Education (IVE)

Hong Kong Tatler

Hong Kong International Learning Academy (HKILA)

Hong Kong Trade Development Council

Hong Kong Chicken & Chablis Club

Hong Kong International School

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

The Hong Kong Chinese Church of Christ

The Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust

Hong Kong Chinmaya Foundation

The Hong Kong Lutheran Handicrafts Society

Hong Kong Christian Service The Hong Kong Club

Hong Kong Lutheran Social Service

Hong Kong Council of Social Service (HKCSS)

The Hong Kong Management Association

Hong Kong Cricket Club

The Hong Kong Management Association K S Lo College

Hong Kong Cable Television Ltd. The Hong Kong Cancer Fund Hong Kong Cheil Church

The Hong Kong Country Club Hong Kong Disneyland Hong Kong Dollarsaver Hong Kong Export Credit Insurance Corporation Hong Kong Express Transportation Co. Ltd. Hong Kong Family Welfare Society Hong Kong Federation of Women The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups Hong Kong Football Association Hong Kong Football Club Hong Kong Full Gospel Church Hong Kong Funeral Home Hong Kong Gardening Society Hong Kong General Chamber of Social Enterprises Ltd. The Hong Kong Girl Guides Association Hong Kong Gold Coast Hotel Hong Kong Golf Club

Hong Kong Japanese School

Hong Kong Mandarin Bible Church Hong Kong Marrow Match Foundation

Hong Kong Tourism Board

Hong Kong Vision Care Centre Hong Kong Youth Development Network The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels Ltd.

IDT Telecom Asia Pacific Ltd. IELTS CEPAS Management Unit IFB International Freightbridge Ltd. IMA Hong Kong Ltd.

Hongkong International Terminals Ltd.

Ideal Films Ltd.

Hongkong Land Ltd.

Hosanna Church

Hotel Nikko Hongkong The Hotung Institute for International Relations Ltd. Hou Tak Securities Ltd.

Hong Kong Preschool’s Playgroup Association

House Hunters Ltd.

Hong Kong Productivity Council

Hue Sang Plastic Factory Ltd.

Hong Kong Rugby Football Union

I.D.D.I. International Ltd.

ISG Asia (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Hotel Inter-Continental Hong Kong

Hong Kong Refugee Advice Centre

ICS Trust (Asia) Ltd.

The ISF Academy

Hong Kong Parkview

Hong Kong Red Cross

ICPASS

Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui Youth Employment Integrated Service Centre

Hop Hing Marketing Co.

Hong Kong Professional and Educational Services

ICE (Inter Cultural Education)

Hong Yip Service Co. Ltd.

Hong Kong Non-Woven Fabric Ind. Co., Ltd.

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

IBM China/Hong Kong Ltd.

IRC Ltd.

Hop Chung School Uniform Co.

Hong Kong Playground Association

IBL Products Co. Ltd.

Hong Lok Yuen International School

Hong Kong Monetary Authority

Hong Kong PHAB Association

Hysan Development Co. Ltd.

Housing Department Hughes-Castell (Hong Kong) Ltd. Hugo Fashions Humanity in Focus Hung Ming Ho. Co. Ltd. Hunglam Toys Co. Ltd. Hunton & Williams

IRI Hong Kong Ltd.

Ida Kemp and William M. Passano Family Foundation, Inc. Ideal Gifts Idealab IKEA Imperial College The Incorporated Owners of Villa Rhapsody Incubasia Ltd. Indigo Living Ltd. Industrial Relations Institute Infox International Ltd. Illawarra Grammar School, Australia ING Asia/Pacific Ltd. Inner City Ministries Inno: Solutions (HK) Ltd. Inside (HK) Ltd. Institute of Civil Engineers Hong Kong The Institute of Cultural Affairs Ltd.

Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital

Husqvarna Viking Sewing Machines

Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui Counselling Service

Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.

Integrated Concepts International Ltd.

Hwa Seng Textile Co. Ltd.

Inter Asia Trading Ltd.

Hong Kong Shrimad Rajchandra Mission

Hwang & Co.

Inter-Trade Agencies Ltd.

Hong Kong Horticultural Society

Interact HKIS

Hong Kong Hotels Association

Hong Kong Shue Yan University

Hyatt International Asia Pacific Ltd.

Hong Kong HPVA

Hong Kong Sinfonietta Ltd.

Hyatt Regency Hong Kong

Hong Kong Government Legislative Council Secretariat Hong Kong Highlanders Hong Kong Hockey Association

74 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Integral Consultancy

Interaction Event Management Ltd.


Interading (Holdings) Ltd.

JCDecaux Pearl & Dean Ltd.

Interconex (Far East) Ltd.

JCI Victoria (Junior Chamber International)

Inter-Continental Certification Consultancy

JustGreen Organic Convenience Store

Kids II Far East Ltd.

Justus International Ltd.

Kin Hing Steel Furniture

JDH Toys Ltd.

K Harjani Electronics

Inter-Continental Hong Kong

J&H Marsh & McLennan Ltd.

K K Removal Ltd.

Interface Asia-Pacific (HK) Ltd.

JJJ Association

K Line (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Interface

JP Morgan

KOG Asia Ltd.

Interlink Productions Ltd.

JSP International Ltd.

KPMG

International Baptist Church

JST (HK) Co. Ltd.

K P Parekh & Sons

International Boundless Dreams Come True Foundation

JTI

KTC (HK) Ltd.

International Care Ministries

J Walter Thompson Company Ltd.

K. Wah Construction Material Ltd.

International China Concern

JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong

K. Y. Resource Ltd.

International Christian Quality Music Secondary and Primary School

Jack Morton

Ka Chi School

Jade Rattan Ware Company Ltd.

Kadie Florists Supplies

Janco Overseas Ltd.

Kadoorie Charitable Foundation

Jane Goodall Institute (HK) Ltd.

Kadoorie Estate Ltd.

Japanese International School

Kadoorie Farm & Botanic Garden Corporation

International Christian School International College Hong Kong International Commerce Centre Management Services Office

Japco Express Ltd.

International Corporate Structure

Jardine Airport Services

International Forwarding Ltd.

Jardine OneSolution (HK) Ltd.

International Freight Logistics

Jardine Securicor Gurkha Services Ltd.

International Montessori School

Jarden Outdoor Solutions Jardine Fleming Holdings

Kimberley Hotel Kin Wing Co. King & Wood Mallesons King Fook Jewellery Group Ltd. King George V School King Parrot Group Kingfisher Asia Ltd. Kingsbridge Ltd. Kingston International School Kingston Trading Co. Kinnex International Ltd. Klys & Co. International Ltd. Knight Frank Knox Apparel Ltd. Ko Dak Clothing Company Ko Lui Secondary School

Kai Shing Management Services Ltd.

Kodak (Far East) Ltd.

Kaiyu Asia Industrial Ltd.

Kontinent Six

Kalmar Asia Pacific Ltd.

Korean International School

Kam Kwong Company

Kowloon Central Cluster

Kambo Manufacturing Co. Ltd.

Kowloon Cricket Club

Kannada Sangha Hong Kong

Kowloon Hospital

Karl Meyer (H.K.) Ltd.

The Koffee Ko. Ltd.

The International Securities Consultancy Ltd.

Jardine Shipping Services

International School of Ulaanbaatar

Jetair (HK) Ltd.

Kaufland HK Ltd.

Kowloon International Baptist Church

Jetta-Victory Toys and Gifts Co. Ltd.

Kayes International

Kowloon Junior School

Keen Fame Ltd.

Kowloon Shangri-La

Jian Hua Foundation Ltd.

Keen Town Ltd.

Jing Jing Kindergarten and Nursery

Keen’s Products Ltd.

Kowloon Tong School Primary Section

Jipful Ltd.

Kellett School

Jockey Club Ti-l College

Kelly International Corp Ltd.

Jockey Club Sarah Roe School

Kely Support Group

John Ho Art

Kennedy School

John Swire and Sons Hong Kong Ltd.

Kennedys

Johnson & Johnson (HK) Ltd.

Kentville Kindergarten

International Social Service Hong Kong Branch International SOS (HK) Ltd. International Vedic Centre Interpac Containers Ltd. Investec Capital Asia Limited Islamic Union of Hong Kong Island Christian Academy Island City Church Island Evangelical Community Church Island Pacific Hotel Island School

Javacatz

Joinstar International Ltd.

Island Shangri-La Hong Kong

Joint School Volunteer Association

Italia Marittima Hong Kong Ltd.

Jones Lang LaSalle

The Italian Women’s Association

Joseph Wong & Co., (HK) Ltd.

Item Industries Ltd. Ivy Gate

Kellett Cares

Kennoway Ltd. Keystore International Ltd. Khimco (HK) Ltd. Kiama Anglican Churches, Australia

Kowloon Union Church Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation Kretztechnik AG, Austria Kroll Kum Shing Group Kumon Hong Kong Ltd. Kwong & Associates Ltd. Kwong Lam Baptist Church Kwong Wah Hospital Kwun Tone Ltd. Kwun Tong Government School

Joywind Knitting Ltd.

Kiangsu & Chekiang Primary School and Kindergarten

The Kwun Tong Vocational Training Centre

Juicy Red Ltd.
June Dally Watkins Business School, Australia

Kiangsu Chekiang College, International Section

LD Asia (Hong Kong)

JB Group Ltd.

LF Asia

JBL Production

Junior Achievement Hong Kong

Kiangsu International School

LGA (HK) Ltd.

J. C. & Winsons Co. Ltd.

Junior Police Call

Kiddyco Juvenile Products Ltd.

L. G. Sourcing Inc.

J. Candice Interior Architects

JUSCO

Kids’ Gallery Co. Ltd.

L&J Industrial Company

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

75


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! La Rose Noire

Lewis Counsel Pty Ltd., Australia

College

La Salle College

LexisNexis

Lui Hing Hop Co. Ltd.

Man Hing Hong Property Management & Agency Co. Ltd.

Lachmi’s International Ltd.

Li & Fung Group

Luk Kwok Hotel

Man Hou Solutions Ltd.

Ladies’ Circle Hong Kong

Li Ning Sports Technology Development

Luk Yee Landscaping & Design

Man Kiu College

Lutheran Education Association of Houston, USA

Mandarin Oriental Hotel

Lutheran School Social Work Unit

Manhattan Apartments

Ladies Recreation Club Lai Chi Kok Hospital Lai Yiu Campus School No. 2 Lam Bing Yim School Lam Construction Co. Ltd. Lamex Trading Co. Ltd. Land Development Corporation Land Partners Group Ltd. Lands Department Landscope Real Estate Services Ltd. Lane Crawford Langham Hotel Hong Kong Language Services International (ESL) Lantral Co. Ltd. Lap Tak Garment Factory Ltd. The Lark Group of Companies Laser Time Ltd. Latitude Ltd. The Law Society of Hong Kong LeaderSource SGA, USA Leadership Development International

Li Po Chun United World College of HK Li Sing Tai Hang School Lidl Asia Pacific Sourcing Ltd. Life Couriers International

Luxury Hotels Int’l of Hong Kong Ltd.

Mango Production Manhattan Garments (International) Ltd.

Lykes Lines Ltd.

Mansfield Manufacturing Company Ltd. Marc James Design

Life in English

Lynchpin Bondholder Management

Lifelike Toys Industrial Co. Ltd.

M28 Fellowship

Lifestyle Asia

MBS Logistics Ltd.

Lighthouse Ministries Ltd.

MGA Entertainment

Lighting Analysts, Inc., USA

MGB Metro Group Buying HK Ltd.

Life Education Activity Programme (LEAP)

Lime Design Ltd. Lindar Ltd. Lineapiu Group Asia (HK) Ltd. Ling Liang Church M H Lau Secondary School

MHA Company Ltd. MIAT (Mongolian Airlines) MJ Workshop Ltd. MMM International (HK) Ltd.

The Marco Polo Hongkong Hotel Marcus International Mariners’ Club Markant Trading Organisation (Far East) Ltd. Market Research Co. the marketing store Marks & Clerk Marks & Spencer (HONG KONG) Ltd.

Lingnan University

M. Moser Associates (HK) Ltd.

Linklaters Hong Kong

MOL (Asia) Ltd.

Markson Sparks Pty. Ltd., Australia

Links Relocations

MP Hong Kong

Marlow International Ltd.

Lippincott Hong Kong

MPFA

Marriage Maestros

Little Tykes

M+R Forwarding (HK) Ltd.

Marriott International

Littlefuse HK Ltd.

MSAS Cargo International (Far East) Ltd.

Mars Foods Hong Kong

MSC (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Martha Boss Lutheran Day Nursery

MTL Corporation Ltd.

Marycove School

MTR Corporation

Mary Kay (HK) Ltd.

Mabuchi Motor Co. Ltd.

Maryknoll Convent School

Maclaren (HK) Ltd.

Marymount Secondary School

MacLehose Medical Rehabilitation Centre

Mast Industries (Far East) Ltd.

Leadership Training Association

Liwaco Overseas Marketing Ltd.

League of Women Voters of the U.S.

Liz Claiborne International Ltd. Lloyd George Management

Lee I Yao Memorial Secondary School

Lloyd Wise & Co.

Lee Kum Kee Co. Ltd.

Lloyds TSB Pacific Ltd.

Lee On Hong

L’Occitane (Far East) Ltd.

Lee Shau Kee Secondary School

Lodge Eastern Scotia

Legend Learning Center

Logistic (HK) Ltd.

Legg Mason Investment

Lok Sin Tong Benevolent Society

Lehman Brothers Asia

Macquarie Group Foundation, Australia

Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd.

Lok Sin Tong Wong Ching Ming Secondary School

Macquarie Group Hong Kong

Lekhsons Exports (HK) Ltd.

Lok Wah Catholic Primary School

Macro Asia Wines & Spirits HK Ltd.

Leo Club of Hong Kong Citizens

Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch (Asia) Ltd.

Madam Lau Kam Lung Secondary School of MFBM

Maxim’s Group

Long Wise Inc.

Maersk Hong Kong Ltd.

Longrand Electronics Ltd.

Magazzini Vivace Ltd.

Mayatronics Manufacturing and Export Co.

Leo Club of Metropolitan Hong Kong

Loosli & Co. AG

Majestic Furniture

Mayer Brown JSM

Louis Vuitton HK Ltd. Low Land Fashion (HK) Ltd.

Mak Heng Kei (HK) Construction Co.

McDonalds

Leo Club of Mount Cameron

McLarry International

Leo Club of South Kowloon

Lucia San Optometrist

Malaysia Airlines

Mead Hong Kong Ltd.

Level (3) Communications

Lufthansa German Airlines

Mallesons Stephen Jaques

Medecins Sans Frontieres

Levi Strauss (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Lui Cheung Kwong Lutheran

Malone College, USA

Medi Media Pacific Ltd.

Leo Club of Hong Kong Island Leo Club of Hong Kong Shouson Hill

Lloyd’s Register Asia

76 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Macquarie Bank Ltd.

Master Paintings Art Gallery Matilda Hospital Matsuden Company Ltd. Mattel Toys Vendor Operations Asia Max Marketing Maxwell Exports


Media Asia Group Ltd. Media Property Ltd. Mediaplanet Asia Ltd. The Media Village Medical Education Services Ltd. Mediterranean Shipping Co. (HK) Ltd. MEGA Brands Hong Kong

Mission Contract Furniture Co. Ltd.

Nam Po Footwear Ltd.

Ningbo HuiZehn Academy, China

Mission Possible, USA

Nan Tai Hardware and Chemical Co. Ltd.

Mission Support Ltd.

Narba Ltd.

Ningbo Ship Import & Export Co. Ltd.

Mitsubishi Bank

Narrowgate Consulting (Australia) Pty. Ltd.

Nisha Electronic Industries Ltd. Noah Bookshop

National Australia Bank

Noble Group Ltd.

Native English Speaking Teachers Association

Noble Resources Ltd.

NatWest Markets

Norasia (China) Ltd. Nordica Printing Co. Ltd. North Kwai Chung Maternal & Child Health Centre

Mitsubishi Electric Hong Kong Mitsubishi Logistics Hong Kong Ltd.

Nomura Hong Kong

Mega Excellent Ltd.

Mitsubishi UFJ Securities (HK) Holdings Ltd.

Melange Fashion Ltd.

The Mix

Melco International Development Ltd.

Mixer Electronics Co. Ltd.

Navigator (HK) 4x4 Offroad Association

Mobley Group Pacific Limited

Nelson Chen Architects Ltd.

Mercedes-Benz Hong Kong Ltd.

Moce International Ltd.

NEO-Fantastic Fashions Ltd.

Mercer

Modern Bachelor Education Centre

NYK Line (HK) Ltd.

Modern Media Hong Kong Ltd.

Nethersole School of Nursing

Modern Terminals Ltd.

NetStar Hong Kong Ltd.

Modern Wing Travel Ltd.

Nettwerk Management, UK

Mon Deco

The Northern Trust Company of HK Ltd.

New Age International Ltd.

Monarch International Ltd.

Northridge Vineyard, Australia

New Art Kit Laundry and Dry Clean Co

Northside Christian College, Australia

New City Cleaning Service Corporation

Northwest Airlines

Merit Concord Enterprises Ltd. Merril Lynch (Asia Pacific) Ltd. The Merton Co. Ltd. Merx Methodist Centre Methodist International Church

Mong Kok Pro Bicycle Shop

Metro Exports Ltd.

Monkton Combe School, UK

Metropark Hotel

Moore Stephens Accountancy & Consultancy

Metropole International Department Stores Ltd.

Nestlé Hong Kong

New Faith Enterprise Company

Noris International Trading Co.

North Point Methodist Church Kindergarten North West Environmental Service

Norwegian International School

Morgan Stanley

New Guinea Pacific Line

Novartis Pharmaceuticals (HK) Ltd.

MiCO Electric (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Morning Star

New Horizons

NuBridge Company Ltd.

Microsoft

Morrison Academy Taiwan

New Island Printing Co. Ltd.

Nude is Rude

Microware Ltd.

Mothercare

OIC Distributors Ltd.

Midas Garment Factory Ltd.

Mother’s Choice

New Life Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association

Motorola Asia Pacific Ltd.

New Profile (HK) Ltd.

OM Ships International

Motorola Semi Conductor Hong Kong Ltd.

New Song Christian Kindergarten

OOCL (HK) Ltd.

Mount Carmel School, USA

New World Apartments

Movieland

New World China Land Ltd.

O & S Mark Charitable Trust, Australia

Miller International Loss Adjusters (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Mreferral Corporation (HK) Ltd.

New World Development Co. Ltd.

Ocean Park Academy Hong Kong

Million International Ltd.

Multek Hong Kong Ltd.

New World First Bus

Ocean Park Corporation

New World Renaissance Hotel

Odyssey Publications

New World Telecommunications Ltd.

The Ogle Christian Fund, UK

Miele Hong Kong Ltd. Milagros Corporation Ltd. Milestone Trading Ltd. Millenium International Ltd.

Millward Brown International

Mui Wo Inn

Minelco Asia Pacific Ltd.

Munsang College (Hong Kong Island)

Ming Fai Company Ltd.

NDS Asia Pacific

Ming HK Ltd.

NGS

Ming Hui Trading Ltd.

NHK Hong Kong Bureau

New York Life Insurance Worldwide Ltd.

OMS International Inc.

ORBIS

The Ohel Leah Synagogue Charity Okano Ltd.

New Zealand Trade & Enterprise

Oliver’s The Delicatessen

Newell Rubbermaid Asia Pacific

Olympus Capital Holdings

Next Media Ltd.

OMICRON Electronics Asia Ltd.

N M Rothschild & Sons

Next Step Asia Ltd.

On Line Design Ltd. One Heart Greeting Cards Ltd.

Minter Ellison Lawyers

NTW & JWA Leung Sing Tak Primary School

Nice Accord Company Ltd. Nicety Spectacle Mfg. Co. Ltd.

The Open Classroom Ltd.

Miracle Seeds Learning Centre

Nam Long Hospital

Night Hawks Basketball Team

Open University of Hong Kong

Mirtex Enterprises

Namco Electronic Supply Ltd.

Nike International Ltd.

Operation Mobilisation (HK)

Ming Kee Hong PVC Ltd. Ming’s Optometry Centre Mint Chance Industrial (HK) Co. Ltd.

NICE APAC Ltd. NLSI Peace Evangelical Secondary School

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

77


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! Pfizer Corporation Hong Kong Ltd.

Polarline Development Ltd. (POAD)

Pharmtech (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Polartec Asia Ltd.

Philip Chu Ltd.

Polly Yu Production Ltd.

Palm Singapore Pte. Ltd.

Philip Morris Asia Ltd.

Potash and Phosphate Institute

Philippine Airlines

Power Packing

Organisation Development Ltd.

Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital

Philippines Tourism Office

Power Sports Ltd.

Organisation UnLtd., Australia

Panashiba

Philips Electronics HK Ltd.

Precious Blood Hospital (Caritas)

Orient Trucking (HK.) Ltd.

Panda Hotel

Phiten (HK) Ltd.

Premier Consulting

Oriental Logistics Holdings Co. Ltd.

Panther Express

Phoenix Advertising Design & Production Ltd.

Premium Source Ltd.

Orison Company Ltd.

Park Hotel

Pricerite Stores Ltd.

Oro Watch Ltd.

The Park Lane Hong Kong

Phoenix Satellite Television Co. Ltd.

Orobanez Ltd. Osage Art Consultancy Ltd.

Park World, Datateam Publishing Ltd., UK

Ottica Far East Ltd.

Parker Foundation, USA

Piccavilla (HK) Ltd.

Otto International (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Parkview International PreSchool

Pine Hill Advanced Training Centre

Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church

Parkview Rhine Garden International Pre-School

Pinnacle Industrial Ltd.

Our Lady of the Rosary College

Parlico International Ltd.

Outpac Designs Ltd.

Pioneer Corporation Ltd.

Parolia (Far East) Ltd.

Outward Bound Hong Kong

PizzaExpress (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Parry, Frow & Associates Ltd.

The Oval Partnership

Place Harmonic

Overjoy Porcelain Co.

Partner Reinsurance Company Ltd.

Plant-a-Park Ltd.

Ovolo Group

Partners Education Foundation

Oxfam Hong Kong

Partners International

Platinum Financial Services Ltd.

PAG

Passion Co.

PCCW-HKT Ltd.

Paul Lee Enterprise Co. Ltd.

PIFF Shipping Services Ltd.

Operation Mobilisation Macau

Pacific Trader HK Ltd.

Operation Santa Claus

Packing House

Oracle

Pak Fa Fashion Ltd.

Orange Business Services

Pak Shing Travel Co. Ltd.

Orchestra Asia Ltd. Orchid House Fashion Ltd.

Parakeet Ltd.

Phoenix School International photools.com - Digital Image Management Solutions

Pinsent Masons

Plaschem International Ltd. Play Along (Hong Kong) Ltd.

The Press Room Group PricewaterhouseCoopers Pricoa Real Estate and Relocation Hong Kong Ltd. Primo Education Centre Prince of Wales Hospital Princess Margaret Hospital Principal Insurance Co. (Hong Kong) Ltd. Principal One Principal Trust Company (Asia) Ltd. Printemp Hotel Apartment Private Capital Ltd. Product Marketing Mayborn Ltd. Product Resource Marketing Co.

Playground Music Ltd.

Professional Property Services Group

Paul Weiss

Playright Children’s Play Association

Progress Fashion Ltd.

PMA Investment Advisors Ltd.

Paul Y Engineering Group Ltd.

Po Kok Primary School

P M Hana HK Ltd.

Pavilion Investment Ltd.

Po Kok Secondary School

PNET Section, Education & Manpower Bureau

Peak School

Po Leung Kuk

Peak Tramway Co. Ltd.

Po Leung Kuk Choi Kai Yau School

P&O Nedlloyd (HK) Ltd. PPG Coatings (Hong Kong) Co. Ltd. Pablo & Rusty’s, Australia Pacific Andes International Holdings Ltd. Pacific Best Ltd. Pacific Club Pacific Coffee Company, Ltd. Pacific Hills Christian School, Australia Pacific HK

Pearson Education North Asia Ltd. Pedus Hong Kong Ltd. Pee Vee Sons Pelagic Industrial Ltd. Peniel School & Kindergarten The Peninsula Hong Kong Pentart Industrial Ltd. Pentland Asia Ltd. Perfect Fresh Fruit, Vegetable & Food Wholesale

Pacific International Lines (HK) Ltd.

Perfect Glamour

Pacific Palisades

Peter Black Hong Kong Ltd.

Pacific Rim Ltd.

Peter Needs Pharmacy, Australia

Pacific Textiles Ltd.

Peter Trading Co. Ltd.

Pershing Tsang Primary School

78 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Po Leung Kuk Lo Kit Sing (1983) College

Project Art at Heart Ltd. Promise (HK) Co. Ltd. Promotional Partners Group Ltd. Promotions Industries Corp. Prompt Express Ltd. Protein Ltd. Protronics Company Ltd.

Po Leung Kuk Ngang Po Ling College

Provera International HK Ltd.

Po Leung Kuk Tang Yuk Tien College

Prudential Holdings

Po Leung Kuk Tin Ka Ping Milliennium Primary School

Pui Tak Canossian College

Po Leung Kuk Tong Nai Kan College

Providence Equity Asia Ltd. PT. Garuda Indonesia Pure Group The Putman

Po Leung Kuk Vicwood K T Chong Sixth Form College

Q Language

Po Shing Shoe Co. Ltd.

QANTAS Airways Ltd.

Pok Fu Lam Management Company

Qi Chuang Social Work Service Center, China

Pok Oi Hospital Chan Feng Man Ling Care and Attention Home

Qingdao MTI International School

Q9 Technology Holdings Ltd.


Qualidux Industrial Co. Ltd.

Repulse Bay Dental Clinic

Qualipak Manufacturing Ltd. Quality Control Services Ltd.

SKH Wei Lun Primary School

Resurrection Church

Rotary Club of Kowloon Golden Mile

Reuters Hong Kong Ltd.

Rotary Club of Kowloon North

SMAAT

Quantrix Ltd.

Revco Enterprises Ltd.

Quarry Bay Baptist Church

Revival Chinese Ministries

Quarry Bay School

Rhenish Church Pang Hok Ko Memorial College

Quatex Company Queen Mary Hospital Queen’s College Old Boys’ Association Secondary School

Rhombus International Hotels Group Richards Basmajian

Rotary Club of Lan Kwai Fong Rotary Club of Mosman, Australia

S.P.O.T. - Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups

Rotary Club of Queensway

SQ Circle Hong Kong Ltd.

Rotary Club of Rutherford Telarah, Australia

STARS

Rotary Club of Tsim Sha Tsui

STEPS (Steps to Embrace People in Sri Lanka), HKU

Rotary Club of Victoria

STFA Leung Kau Kui College

Richelle International

Quintiles Hong Kong Ltd.

Richfield Realty Ltd.

RC Outfitters

Richform Holdings Ltd.

R.D.K. International Merchandising (HK) Ltd.

Richland Worldwide Ltd.

RHK Design Ltd.

Ricoh Hong Kong Ltd.

R. Makhija & Company

Rimol (HK) Co.

RMJM

The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong

R & N Associated Insurance Agents

Rouse Hill Anglican College, Australia

RoadShow Media Ltd.

Rowland Budge Ltd.

Robeco Hong Kong Ltd.

Royal Bank of Scotland

Robert Bosch Co. Ltd.

Royal Brunei Airlines

Robinson Place Sport Club

Royal Consulate General of Cambodia

R. S. Export RTHK R. T. Sourcing Asia Ltd. Rabobank Radha Soami Satsang Beas Society Hong Kong Ltd. Radica Ltd. Raimondi College The Randolph, Oxford, UK Ranees Export HK Rasa (HK) Engineering Co. Rasco International Ltd. Reader’s Digest Association Far East Ltd. Ready To Learn Realty Solution Consultants Ltd. Realway Investment Ltd. Red House (HK) Co. Ltd. Red Sea Trading Co. Ltd. Reed Elsevier (UK) Ltd. Regency Enterprises Ltd. Regional Container Lines (HK) Ltd. Relief Pod International Remar Association (HK) Ltd. Renaissance Capital (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Rock Solid Church, USA Roland Schmidt China Ltd. Ronald McDonald House Rosebud Primary School Rosedale on the Park Rotaract Club of Chu Hai College of Higher Education

SMKMCF Ma Ko Pan Memorial College

Rotary Club of Peninsular

Quiksilver Ltd.

Richwear Holdings Ltd.

SLT Japan Co. Ltd.

Rotary Club of Wahroonga, Australia Rothschild Round Table Rouse

The Royal Garden Hotel The Royal Pacific Hotel & Towers Royal Park Hotel Royal Plaza Hotel The Royale International Group Russell Corporation Far East Ltd.

Sabic HK Ltd. Sacred Heart Canossian College Saigon South International School, Saipan Saipan High School salesforce.com Hong Kong Ltd. Salient Holdings Ltd. The Salvation Army Salvation Army Tsuen Wan Nursery The Salvation Army William Booth Secondary School Sam Wai Plastic Toys Ltd. The Samaritan Befrienders Hong Kong Sanaco Co. Ltd. Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Sandy’s Collection Ltd.

Rotaract Club of Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Ryan Charitable Trust

Rotaract Club of HKUSU

SDG Sourcing

Rotaract Club of Lingnan University

SGB Asia Pacific Ltd.

Rotaract Club of New Territories

SHIP Group

Sanwin Watches & Electronic Goods

Rotaract Club of Peninsula South

SHL Hong Kong

Sapphire International Ltd.

SKC Group Ltd.

Sara (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Rotary Club of Brisbane, Australia

SKH Kei Hau Secondary School

Sartorius Hong Kong Ltd.

SKH Kei Lok Primary School

SaSa International Holdings Ltd.

SKH Kindly Light Church

Sassoon Securities Ltd.

SKH Lam Kau Mow Secondary School

Schenker International (HK) Ltd.

SKH Li Fook Hing Secondary School

Schroders Investments

Rotary Club of Guia & Rotaract Club of Guia Rotary Club of Hong Kong Rotary Club of Hong Kong Island East Rotary Club of Hong Kong Northwest Rotary Club of Hong Kong South

SAP Hong Kong

SGS Hong Kong Ltd.

SKH Lui Ming Choi Secondary School

Sanford C. Bernstein (Hong Kong) Ltd. Santa Fe Transport International Ltd.

Schmidt & Co (HK) Ltd. Schutte & Co. Far East Ltd. Science Workshop Scottish & Oriental Estates Ltd.

Renaissance College

Rotary Club of Huon Gulf, PNG

SKH Ming Hua Theological College

Renaissance Harbour View Hotel Hong Kong

Rotary Club of Kingspark Hong Kong

SKH St Simon’s Lui Ming Choi Secondary School

Search Investment Holdings Ltd.,

Rentokil Initial Hong Kong Ltd.

Rotary Club of Kowloon

SKH St Thomas Day Creche

The Second Tunic, USA

Sea-Land Service Inc.

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

79


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! Securities and Futures Commission

Singapore International Foundation

South African Airways

St Louise School, Seattle USA

South African Consulate General

Seele (HK) Ltd.

St Margaret Mary’s Parish

Singapore International School

Sek Kong Hash House Harriers

St Mary’s Church

Selby Family Clinic, Australia

Singapore Management University

South Base International Industrial Ltd. South China Diving Club

Senator Lines (Asia) Ltd.

Sino Land Co. Ltd.

St Paul’s Church

South China Media

Sha Tin Junior School

Sino Leader International Ltd.

St Paul’s Co-educational College

South China Morning Post

Sha Tin College

Sinolink Holdings (China) Ltd.

South Island School

St Paul’s Co-educational Primary School

Shama

Sinovico

The Shamdasani Foundation

South Tuen Mun Government Secondary School

St Paul’s Convent School

Siren Film

Shannon Structured Services Ltd.

Sirius Asia Ltd.

St Paul’s Secondary School

SiteTalk Care

Southampton Container Terminals, UK

Shatin Anglican Church

Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom

Southern Energy Asia Pacific Ltd. Sowers Exchange Ltd.

Shatin Pui Ying College

Skandia Asset Management

Shatin Tsung Tsin School

Sky Eagle Consolidation Godown Ltd.

Spanish Trade Commission Hong Kong

Sharp-Roxy Hong Kong Ltd.

Shau Kei Wan East Government Secondary School

Skyhigh Plastic Works Ltd.

Shearman & Sterling LLP

Skylight Industries Ltd.

Shekou International School

Skyrock Cargo &Trading Co.

Shelcore Hong Kong Ltd.

Skytruck International Ltd.

Shenship Logistics Ltd.

Small World Christian Kindergarten

Sheraton Hong Kong Hotel & Towers Sheung Shui Wai Chow Kindergarten

Smith Owens Services Ltd., Australia

Spark Marketing Ltd. The Spastics Association of Hong Kong Specialized Technology Resources SPECS Hong Kong Specsavers Speed Master Transportation Co. SpeedCast Ltd.

St Mary’s Home for the Aged

St Paul’s Hospital St Paul’s Tervuren, Belgium St Rose of Lima’s College St Rose of Lima’s School St Stephen’s Chapel St Stephen’s Church College St Stephen’s Girls’ College St Stephen’s Girls’ Primary School St Stephen’s Society St Teresa Hospital St Too Girl’s College Standard & Poor’s Standard Bank Asia Standard Chartered Bank

SmoothWall Ltd., UK

SpencerStuart

Shingengen (HK) Co. Ltd.

Snaproducts (HK) Ltd.

Spilt Milk Ltd.

Shipping Corporation of India

Soap Cycling

The SPIRIT of Hong Kong

Shiseido Hong Kong Ltd.

Socgen-Crosby Securities (HK) Ltd.

Splunk, Japan

Star Arts Co. STAR Group Ltd.

Social Welfare Department

Sports Physiotherapy International

Star HK Electronic Ltd.

Spring Arbor University, USA

Star Lines Co. Ltd.

Shui Hing (HK) Ltd.

Social Workers Registration Board

St Andrew’s Church

Shun Hing JVC Ltd.

Society for Aged Centre

St Anne’s Catholic Church

Star Shipping Agencies (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Shun On Baptist Church

St Antonius Girls’ College

Shun Tak Holdings Ltd.

Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (HK)

Shung Tak Catholic English College

Society for the Relief of Disabled Children

St Bonaventure College & High School

Shyam’s Toys

Society for Welfare of Autistic Persons

St Catherine’s International Kindergarten

Stefcom Societa Per Azioni

Solar Exports Ltd.

St Christopher’s - ChristChurch, NZ

Stephenson Harwood & Lo

Shore Sydney Church of England Grammar School Shriro Pacific Ltd.

Side Fame Ltd. Silver Base Group Holdings Silverside Ltd. Silvertex Exports Ltd. Simmons & Simmons

Solid Rock Four Square Church Solid Wood Manufacturing Ltd. Somerset Park (Asia) Ltd.

Simmons Bedding and Furniture (HK) Ltd.

Sonashi Electronics Ltd.

Simpson Spence & Young Hong Kong Ltd.

Sonwealth International Co. Ltd.

Sonny Manufactory Ltd.

St Barnabas’ Society and Home

St Eugene de Mazenod Oblate Primary School St Francis Canossian College St Jerome’s Church

Standard Life Investments Asia The Standard – Sing Tao Daily

Starbucks Coffee Asia Pacific Ltd. Starform Services Ltd. Starlight Industrial Ltd. Steer Incorporated Stephens Associates Far East Ltd. Sterling Private Management Ltd. Stewards Co. Stewards Ltd.

St John’s Cathedral

Stewards MKMCF Ma Ko Pan Memorial College

St John’s Counselling

Stewards Pooi Kei College

St Joseph’s College

Stewardship

Simway Electrical

Sony Corporation of Hong Kong Ltd.

Sing Pao Newspaper Company Ltd.

Sony Music Entertainment (Hong Kong) Ltd.

St Joseph’s Ladies Guild

Stone & Webster Asia, Inc.

St Joseph’s Primary School

Stored

Singapore Airlines

Sourcing Far East Ltd.

St Ka Sum Tong Kindergarten

Story Seeds

80 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014


Strategic Public Relations Group Ltd.

TREE

Therapy Associates (HK) Ltd.

Tradefinders Ltd.

T. S. Lines Ltd.

ThinkFun Inc., USA

Trane Pacific

StreetAccount

TWGHs Lo Kon Ting Memorial College

Think International School

Trans-Asial Cargo Logistic Co. Ltd.

TWGHs Lo Yu Chik Primary School

Thornleigh Community Baptist Church, Australia

Transpacific (Far East) Ltd.

ThoughtWorks Studios, San Francisco, USA

Treasure Island

Studio Pantheon II Ltd. Subway Success Time Industrial Ltd. Sujie Children’s University Summer Infant Asia Ltd. Sun Glory Sun Hing Shipping Co. Ltd. Sun Hoi Garments International Ltd. The Sun Hong (International) Trading Corp. Sun Hung Kai & Co. Ltd. Sun Hung Kai Financial Sun Po Trading Co. Sun Sill Development Ltd. Sun Volunteer

TWGHs Tai Tung Pui Care & Attention Home TY Dental Services Tai Fung Textiles Co. Ltd. Tai Hang Tung Integrated Service for Senior Citizens Tai Hing Cheung Pallet Co.

Swire Resources Ltd. Swire Shipping (Agencies) Ltd. Swire Staff Association Sydenham Baptist Church, Australia

Tri-Wave (Hong Kong) Ltd. True Light Girls’ College

Tai Po Peace Evangelical Centre

Timberland Hong Kong Ltd.

Tai Po Vineyard Christian Fellowship

Time Collection (HK) Co. Ltd.

True Light Middle School of Hong Kong

Times Rapier

Truth Baptist Church

Times Square/Wharf Estate Management

Tsim Sha Tsui Baptist Church

Timic Asia

Tsuen Wan Adventist Hospital

Tin Hung Sponge Factory

Tsun Tat Stationery

Takihyo Hong Kong Co. Ltd.

Tin Shui Wai Catholic Primary School

Tsung Tsin Mission of Hong Kong Whampoa Church

Takson Holdings Ltd.

Tin Shui Wai Methodist College

Tsung Tsin Primary School

TANDBERG Hong Kong

Tin Yin Buddhist Association Ltd.

The Tuba Drinks Company

Tandoor Indian Restaurant

Tino Kwan Lighting Consultants Ltd.

Tuen Mun Catholic Church

Tasman Orient Line Ltd. Tat Ming Trading Company

Titan Triathalon

Teach Me Know!

TOD’S Hong Kong

Team Tower Toys Development Ltd.

Together Ltd. Togni & Zhao Ltd.

Tuen Mun Hospital

Team Up Product Development Co. Ltd.

The Tokio Marine and Fire Insurance Co. (HK) Ltd.

Tuen Mun Ling Liang Church Tunbow Group

Toko Shoji (Hong Kong) Co. Ltd.

Tung Chung Station Development Co. Ltd.

Tak Oi Secondary School

TechDonation TechnoKids Hong Kong

Syracuse University

Technology & Education: Connecting Cultures (Hong Kong)

Systex, Taiwan

TechnoMarine Asia Ltd.

The Sze Tian Rhennish Home for the Elderly

Teleforce Ltd.

TCC

Telstra International Group

Synovate Ltd.

T.C. Food Services TFP Farrells Ltd.

Trinity Grammar School, Sydney Australia

Tribute Ltd.

Tillsonburg Ltd.

Take Me (Far East) Ltd.

Swire Properties Management Ltd.

ThyssenKrupp AG

Tai Po Hospital

Sunshine Plastic Industrial Co. Ltd.

Swedish Consulate General in Hong Kong

Trendo International

Tigger Treats

Tak Fat Hong Children’s Fashion

Supply Consultants Ltd.

Thunderbird School of Management

Tai Ping Carpets Ltd.

Sunny Legend Industrial (China) Ltd.

Superb Manufacturing Ltd.

The Treasury, Government of HKSAR

Tai Pan Fashion Knitting Factory

Sundai Linden School

Super Star Company Ltd.

Three Com

Transtech Consulting Group

Tianjin International School, China

Tai Wing International Trading Co. Ltd.

Sunwide Storage

Thomson Reuters

Television Broadcasts Ltd. Temple Chambers Tenderloin Fine Food Ltd.

TOM Group Ltd. Tom Lee Music Co. Ltd. Tommy Tippee Tonefit Knitters Ltd. Tonnish Industrial Co. Ltd. Top Rich Logistics (HK) Ltd. Totes Isotoner Corporation Ltd. Touch of Heaven, Australia Tourism Authority of Thailand

Triumph Ford Industrial Ltd.

Tsim Sha Tsui Police Station

Tuen Mun Catholic Secondary School Tuen Mun Government Secondary School

Tung Wah Group of Hospitals Tung Wah Group of Hospitals Kap Yan Directors’ College Tung Wai Motor Ltd. tupo Industrial Co. Ltd. Turkish Airlines Turner International Asia Pacific Ltd.

Terry Douglas

Toy Boy HK Ltd.

Turramura Uniting Church, Australia

Terry Law World Compassion, USA

Toyo Trust Asia Ltd.

Tyco Engineering & Construction

TMP Asia Ltd.

Toys ‘R’ Us - Lifung Ltd.

U2

TMT Electric Mfg Co Ltd.

Tesco International Sourcing Ltd.

Toys Replay

UA Cinema Circuit Ltd.

TNS

Thai Airways International

Trade Winds HK Ltd.

UBS AG

TREATS

Thales Transportation Systems

Trade Without Borders

UDL Holding Ltd.

T & G and Company TIME

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

81


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS! UNHCR

Vaford Contracting Co. Ltd.

Wamda Ltd.

Winimax Enterprise Ltd.

UNICEF

Vanguard College, Canada

Wan Hai Lines (HK) Ltd.

Winling Basketball Team

UPS Parcel Delivery Service Ltd.

Variety the Children’s Charity

Wanchai Corner Shop

WiseSpot Company Ltd.

U.R.E.F. Establishment (HK) Ltd.

Vertical Resources Ltd.

Wang Kee Furniture

US Consulate General

Vibrant Inspirations Company Ltd

Wanston Products HK Ltd.

Wise Vision Investments Hong Kong Ltd

The Warehouse Teenage Club

Wisely Kindergarten

Vibuhome

Warnaco Asia Ltd.

Wofoo Social Enterprises

US Marine Corps

Victoria Christian Center, USA

The Washington Post

Women’s Corona Society

US Navy

Watchdog Centre

USG Asia

Victoria Educational Organisation

Women’s Welfare Association, Eastern District

Ubisoft

Victoria Junior Chamber

Watson’s Water

Udda Swedish Ltd.

Victoria Shanghai Academy

U’Land Sanitary Ware Co. Ltd.

Viking Transportation Co.

The Wedding Company

Umbra HK Ltd.

Villa Monte Rosa

Welex Chemicals Ltd.

Umbro Asia Sourcing Ltd.

Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd.

Wellcome Company Ltd.

Umedco (Far East) Ltd.

VISIONTECH

Unican Royal Ltd.

Vision 2047 Foundation

Wellington Management Co. LLP

Unigroup Worldwide Hong Kong Ltd.

Vision Century Corporation Ltd.

The Wesley Hotel

Vision Exports Ltd.

West Island School

Unimax Toys Ltd.

Vision First

West LB AG

Union Battery Company Ltd.

West Street Baptist Church, UK

Union Century Holdings Ltd.

Vision Group (Shenzhen Center Power Tech Co. Ltd.)

Union Church

Vision Signage Production

Westpex Fashions Ltd.

Union Eternal Industry Ltd.

Vision-Pro Industrial Ltd.

Wheaton College, USA

Union Hospital

Visit Britain

Wheelchair Foundation, USA

Union Laservision

Vitasoy International Holdings Ltd.

Wheelock Properties (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Vita-Wheel Holdings Ltd.

White & Case

Vogue Laundry Services

White Lotus Centre

Voice of America

Whitespace

VolTra

Whitney O’Neill

WAG Financial Services Group Ltd.

Wilber & Associates Ltd. Wil-Chan Logistics (HK) Co. Ltd.

YCH Zonta Club of Kowloon Kindergarten/Child Care Centre

WFB Samantabhadra Creche

Wilfred Catering Ltd.

Y C Woo & Co. Ltd.

W F Joseph Lee Primary School

Wilkinson & Grist

YMCA

WWF Hong Kong

William International Kindergarten and Play School

YMCA of Hong Kong Christian College

Wilson Freight (Far East) Ltd.

Y’s Men Club of Island South

Wah Kwai Estate Anglo-Chinese Kindergarten

Wilson Group Ltd.

YWCA

Wilson Parking (Hong Kong) Ltd.

Wah Ming Optical

Win Mark International

The Yale Club of Hong Kong

Wai Ji Christian Service

Winco (Pacific) Ltd.

The University of New South Wales, Australia

Wai Kee Curtains

Wing Fat Company

Wai Kiu College

Wing Kong Holdings Ltd.

Urban Property Management Ltd.

Waki Trading and Engineering Company

The Wing Kwong Pentecostal Holiness Church

Urban Renewal Authority

Wall Street Uniforms International Ltd.

Wing Ming Stationery Co.

Yan Chai Hospital No.5 Secondary School

Wing Sang Cheong Ltd.

Yan Fook Bible Institute

Wallas Knitting Factory Ltd.

Wing Tark Machine Factory

Yan Oi Tong Ltd.

Wing Wo Hong Kong Ind. Products Ltd.

Yan Oi Tong Tin Ka Ping Secondary School

US Export Corporation Hong Kong Ltd.

Union Trading Co. Union-Transport Unis Technology Company United Airlines United Asia Transportation Co. United Biscuits Hong Kong United Christian College United Christian Hospital United Christian Nethersole Comm. Health Service United Goninan International United Jewish Congregation of Hong Kong United Success International Ltd. The University of Hong Kong

V Hotels and Serviced Apartments

Wah Kee Laan Import Company Ltd.

VF Asia Ltd.

Wallem Group Ltd.

VTC Youth College

Walter Kwok Foundation Ltd.

82 Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

Watson Wyatt Worldwide Waves Pacific Ltd.

Western Union Foundation

Wong’s Kong King International (Holdings) Ltd. Woodland Schools Woolworths Group Asia Ltd. The World World Emergency Relief World Presidents’ Organization Hong Kong Chapter Ltd. World Race Team World Sport Group Ltd. World University Service HKUB HKUSU WRAP UK Wrap With Love Inc. Wu Zhi Qiao (Bridge to China) Charitable Foundation Wycliffe Christian School, Australia Wyeth (HK) Ltd. XL Insurance Company Ltd. XRG - Exceptional Resources Group

Yamazen Hong Kong Ltd. Yan Chai Hospital China Chem Care and Attention Home Yan Chai Hospital Lim Por Yen Secondary School


Yan Yan Transportation Co. Ltd. Yardway Ltd. Yau Yee Optical Co. Ltd. Yearfull Contracting Ltd. Yendi Hong Kong Trading Ltd. Yenrabi Ltd. Yes Ltd. Yes! Entertainment Products Ltd. Yew Chung International School Yew Chung Kindergarten Yi Mei Fashion Jewelry Ltd. Ying Wa Girls’ School Yokohama Labels & Printing (HK) Co. Ltd. Yorkshire and General Trust Young & Rubicam (HK) Ltd. Young Life Youngberg Investment Ltd. Yu Chun Keung Memorial College Yuen Long Catholic Secondary School Yuen Long Home for the Aged Blind Yuen Long Kam Kwong Church Yuen Long Merchants Association Secondary School Yuen Long Public Secondary School Yuk Loong International Co Ltd Yung Shing Enterprise Yusen Logistics (Hong Kong) Limited YWAM Zaptron (HK) Ltd. Zeal Asset Management Ltd. Zetland Financial Group Ltd. Zi Corporation Zim Integrated Shipping Services ZLB Behring Asia Pacific Ltd. Zoneo Ltd. Zoroastrian Charity Funds of HK Zultys Technologies, USA

Crossroads Annual Report 2013 - 2014

83


THANK YOU TO OUR SUPPORTERS!

Global Distribution | Global Hand |Global Handicrafts | Global X-perience Crossroads Village 2 Castle Peak Road, Gold Coast, Tuen Mun, Hong Kong Tel: +852 2984 9309 Fax: +852 2771 1715 Email: enquiries@crossroads.org.hk Web: www.crossroads.org.hk 香港新界屯門青山公路2號國際十字路會 電話: +852 2984 9309 傳真: +852 2771 1715 電郵: enquiries@crossroads.org.hk


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