History


Don Bosco Cambodia, or Salesian Delegation Cambodia, is an organization owned by Salesian Don Bosco under Salesian Province, Thailand, which began its activities at the Cambodian Refugee Camp in Thailand in 1988) with a technical school and children’s fund invited by the United Nations. The Royal Government of Cambodia requested Don Bosco in 1990 to come and live in Cambodia for the reconstruction period.

About 50,000 children are able to participate in DBFC-supported basic education, and about 10,000 young people have learned skills that allow them to find stable jobs and improve their living standards (1991-2013). Thank you for joining the effort with donors, volunteers, associations, organizations, governments, past governments, and many others.

The Don Bosco Children’s Fund (DBCF) was established in a refugee camp in Cambodia by Salesain in the 1980s as a way to ensure that children continue to go to school by escaping atrocities such as human trafficking, child abuse and child labor. Children and others. It exists in providing sponsorships for vulnerable children. Children are usually with their own families or in most centers not run by DBFC. Social workers follow their case in a way that children continue their education while addressing potential barriers to their education. Sponsors are invited to support a poor child with a 25-month fee.

DBFC was born in a Cambodian refugee camp in Thailand when the United Nations and the Office of Jesse invited Don Bosco sales staff in Thailand to open six technical centers in six refugee camps along the border. In 1886 and to get an interest in the lives of Cambodian children. In the camp.

Don Bosco Battambang
Don Bosco Kep
Don Bosco Sihanoukville
Don Bosco Poipet
Don Bosco Phnom Penh
  • In 1992, the DBFC established the Don Bosco Children’s Fund. Salesian sisters open vocational training centers for young women and kindergartens for orphans.
  • In 1997, the school opened the Don Bosco Technical School in Sihanoukville, Cambodia’s only deep-sea international port.
  • In the same year, DBFC established two literacy centers in Battambang province.
  • In 2000, it was built as a children’s shelter in Poipet, and it was given land in Kep.
  • In 2007, Don Bosco School in Sihanoukville was inaugurated by His Majesty King Norodom Sihamoni. That same year, it launched a social networking app in the same city.
  • In 2011, Don Bosco Kep Technical School opened and there was an offer to establish a technical center in Ratanakkiri, a project that was established.

The Sala don Don Bosco Technical School of Cambodia aims to provide young Cambodians from poverty with technical skills in a way that they can increase their chances of getting a more honorable job. In this way, young people will raise the standard of living of their own family. Young people apply to Don Bosco Technical School every year for two years of training in various fields. In the interview, the school board evaluates the candidate’s social status. There is a limited number of technical school students available due to Don Bosco’s generosity. Sponsors are invited to support the technical school. So they can continue the mission of training Cambodian youth.

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