Tuen Mun, Hong Kong
Crossroads Foundation is a Hong Kong based, non-profit organisation serving global need. We believe that, in a broken world that sees too much suffering, we should do all we can to link those who are in need with those who can provide help. So we provide an intersection, literally a crossroads, to bring both together. We offer four global crossroads services: Global Distribution: Crossroads’ Global Distribution provides aid for relief and development in over 90 countries, as well as in Hong Kong, our headquarters. - Welfare: In Hong Kong, we actively support the Social Welfare Department and a wide range of NGOs in providing help to individuals and families living in vulnerable circumstances. - Development: Our humanitarian aid is targeted towards entrenched poverty. We redistribute quality goods donated by the Hong Kong community to NGOs, in over 95 countries, who have applied to us with details of their needs and development plans. Follow up and feedback provide ways for all of us to track the effectiveness of the distribution and the sustainability of its outcomes. - Relief: Crossroads’ Global Distribution also addresses major disasters. We target disaster reduction, prepositioning and response, seeking to comply with Sphere Standards in Humanitarian Response to ensure best practice. Global X-perience: The old proverb says: I cannot understand a man until I have walked a mile in his shoes. When people participate in Global X-periences, they do not watch a video or listen to a presentation about global issues. They take a few steps ‘in the shoes’ of people in need. If they are interested in poverty, for example, they experience simulated manual labour and corrupt market practice together with the battle for shelter, food, education and medical care. We offer experiential programmes on war, HIV/AIDS, blindness, hunger, water access, inequality in trade and the complex global range of issues that hold billions in poverty. Many people find experiential learning far more powerful than the spoken or written word. Over 200,000 participants have undertaken experiential programmes, with interest in them growing. Participants include students, business teams, community groups, families and individual visitors. Global Hand: As well as our physical warehouse, Crossroads has a virtual one: www.globalhand.org. Anywhere in the world, real time, people with quality goods or services to donate can offer them through our Global Hand service. We will then pass on the offer to our network of NGOs in Europe, Africa, SE Asia, Central Asia and the Americas seeking the right ‘match’. Placing goods carefully is all important to us. We are strongly committed to doing so wisely and well. Our experienced team works with both sides to ensure that donated goods are placed where they are truly needed and can make a strategic difference in others’ lives. Our network includes seasoned NGOs who specialise in humanitarian logistics. We welcome donations large and small: by the box, the pallet or container load. NGOs are welcome to let us know if your programmes can use donated goods. We would be glad to talk and match up wherever possible! Global Hand also built an online matching system for the United Nations to interact with the corporate sector. You are welcome to visit us on www.globalhand.org, wherever you are in the world. Global Handicrafts: For many in poverty, humanitarian aid is not enough. They need a job with a reliable income. So we provide ‘business solutions’ for people in poverty: fair trade and social enterprises. Our Global Handicrafts shop, at the Crossroads Village site, is an enchanting, multicultural marketplace of items from Hong Kong and around the world. They are purchased on a fair trade basis that sees a fair income go to artisans and producers who are living in economic need. www.globalhandicrafts.org The Silk Road Café sells fair trade teas and coffees from around the world. It also serves snacks from local Hong Kong social enterprise businesses. All sales help provide income for people in need. It’s an oasis of refreshment and community, themed with the colours, patterns and textiles of the Silk Road.
Crossroads Foundation. “Crossroads Foundation Hong Kong | About.” Accessed January 28, 2024. https://www.crossroads.org.hk/about/.We never meant to start Crossroads. We believed the world had enough worthy causes. Rather than begin another, we decided to help those already in existence. We couldn’t stop Crossroads from starting, though, and, now, can’t stop it from growing. Here’s the story. For years, we were sure we wouldn’t start an NGO. Our goal was to use our training to help those already doing a good thing in a hard place. Malcolm, a chartered accountant, volunteered financial services. Sally, a public relations consultant, gave pro bono communications services. Put another way, we used words and numbers to serve those in need. Global Distribution: China Floods (5)In 1995, however, all that changed. One of those charities asked for help following floods in Northern China. “Two million people have lost everything,” we were told. “Could you send aid?” Well, no. Not really. We were not set up to do anything like that. But, we thought, we could try to help, just this once. We collected textiles in Hong Kong and sent off 19 boxes. They wanted more so, next time, we sent 72. Later, 136. Later, 248. Finally, Hong Kong’s Social Welfare Department told us, “You’re getting too large not to be registered”. That was a crossroads for us. We had not intended to start a non-profit organisation, but, whether we liked it or not, the work was growing beyond all expectation. So we registered and the Hong Kong Government graciously allowed us 8 rooms in which to store our donated items. At first, we thought we would never fill those rooms. We were wrong! Shortly after we moved in, we sent out five tons of goods. Within just three weeks, we had received donations of ten tons. After three months, we could no longer fit in those eight rooms. The increase was not just in size and quantity, but also in variety. Soon it wasn’t just clothing and bedding that we were receiving. We received educational toys and supplies, furniture of all shapes and sizes, computers and office equipment, medical provision, literature, stationery, household items, electrical appliances. It was as if a hole had opened in the heavens and goods had begun to flood our lives. In 1995, we sent 19 cartons of relief supplies. Today, our warehouse has goods equating to 200 x 20′ containers. In 1995, we used 170 square feet. Today, we operate from a site that covers 600,000 square feet (14 acres). In 1995, our full-time personnel consisted of two people. Today, we have 70 team members and many more volunteers from the community. In 1995, we collected goods for just one destination. Today, we give: 60% of our donated goods to people in Hong Kong. the other 40% to over 90 countries around the world. The Crossroads story didn’t stop there, though. The surprises continued. Global Hand: Word began to spread at a rate we never expected. We fitted out a medical clinic in Ghana and others in the area noticed. “You got that equipment where?” they asked. “Hong Kong” came the answer and, within a very short time, five other groups in Ghana had asked us for shipments. That kept happening all over the world until we were flooded with requests for help. At the same time, many business companies were offering help, all over the world. “This is the age of the Internet!” we thought. “Surely there should be a match-making service online for companies who want to help charities!” There wasn’t, though, so we built one. Later, the United Nations asked us to build a version for them because they, too, wanted companies to help them battle world need. Global Handicrafts: Scan6And still the Crossroads story didn’t stop. One trip, we were in war-torn Serbia meeting refugees to whom we’d sent sewing machines. They had then started a little clothing business. “Now we can pay for our family’s medicine, our children’s education and the food we need on our table.” The best gift for people battling poverty is often a job that secures their future. So we opened a fair trade marketplace and cafe where we sell what people make or grow: earrings made from former bullet shells in Cambodia, bags made by Indian women released from the sex trade, jewellery made from lacquered paper by war victims in Africa. As they say, it’s better to give a person a hand up, rather than a hand-out. Global X-perience: 4610scr_97da961b4f6970dAnd, finally, we come to the last chapter in this story, so far. It too took us by surprise. On our tenth anniversary, we invited Hong Kong business leaders to take a pile of rubbish, build themselves a slum home and spend the next 24 hours in simulated poverty. “Sorry,” we told our team, “it’s a lot of work to do this but we only have ten year anniversaries every decade or so.” Wrong. After our anniversary, participants said, “Don’t stop doing this. It’s more powerful than anything like it we’ve ever done.” Today, we have simulation x-periences on war, HIV/AIDS, blindness, water shortages, hunger, poverty and more. They help people understand need with their hearts, as well as their heads, when as the old proverb puts it, they take a few steps ‘in another man’s shoes.’ We planned to do it only once but, today, thousands participate every year. Following these simulations, we discuss how participants can engage with the challenges they have just x-perienced, helping those in need. --- So that’s the story of Crossroads. We never meant to start it. The whole undertaking seems to be a miracle that catches us by surprise, afresh, every day. Not that we mind! In our broken world, we can think of nothing we’d rather do than to be a crossroads, bringing together people in need and those who with resource to make a difference. The more of us who come together, the more we will together be able to impact a world that is dying… for help. Malcolm and Sally Begbie
Crossroads Foundation. “Crossroads Foundation Hong Kong | About.” Accessed January 28, 2024. https://www.crossroads.org.hk/about/.Email us to revise your entry or request it to be deleted.