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You know that at HCW, we love the stories where a child gets home, a family is reunited, or a caregiver achieves financial independence. Those are the obvious "wow" moments of the work we support around the world. As the Secretariat for the Sierra Leone Coalition for Family Care (SLCFC), I get to witness from the sidelines some different success stories.
What I'm sharing today is a different kind of "wow" moment. These don't have beauty shots of a child in the loving embrace of his family, or a microfinance recipient proudly standing in front of her shop. But they are the kinds of behind-the-scene wins that can shape how an entire nation cares for its children over time. This is the "build the scaffolding so the house stands for decades" kind of work. And honestly - I'm at least as excited about these updates as I am about many of the others we've shared with you this year. And I'm not even going to apologize for "geeking out" about this. New Momentum with the UK High Commission of Sierra Leone In October, members of the SLCFC met with representatives of the UK High Commission, and a few really important things came out of that conversation:
A Promising Beginning with the Irish Embassy SLCFC members also had a really encouraging meeting with the Irish Embassy that included their new Ambassador in Sierra Leone. They are actively looking for meaningful projects and causes to champion - and they're very interested in what the Coalition is doing. In particular, they want to understand the Coalition's work around:
It's not a photo of smiling child in her mother's arms, but having an Embassy team say, "we're very interested in your national care reform work and how you see this playing out long -term" is a big step toward the kind of political and diplomatic backing that can move care reform from "good idea" to "national priority." Potential Pilots: Two Members Ready to Launch Emergency Foster Care Of course, none of this matters if children on the ground don't experience something different and better. That's why I'm especially excited about this next update. Two of the SLCFC organizations - Princess Promise and Child Reintegration Centre - have now completed training to become emergency foster care providers. Here's what that could mean:
Why These "Quiet Wins" Matter I know that these kinds of updates can sound boring and technical: embassies, communities of practice, theory of change, pilot programs, meetings, meetings, meetings.... But here's why I'm sharing them anyway:
What's Next? In the months ahead, the SLCFC will be:
They may not appear on the face as dramatic as a single powerful story of a family strengthened to independence. But taken together, these are the quiet, steady shifts that can someday make it true to say: in Sierra Leone, children grow up in families - not orphanages.
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January 2026
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