A donation of any amount will go a long way to provide basic needs for these children.

 

As a global parent you'll change your life, and theirs, forever.

 

Voluntourism lets you see and experience our work first hand.

 


News & Events 2010 & 2009

Archives:

2010-2009, 2008, 2007, 2006-2004

 

 

The Daily Texan, “Foundation transforms lives,” by Katherine Kloc

February 11, 2010

When Caroline Boudreaux first visited India in 2000, she was horrified. She had visited impoverished countries before but had never seen children so obviously neglected as some of the Indian children in the orphanage system.
http://www.dailytexanonline.com/life-arts/foundation-transforms-lives-1.2149042

 

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Continental InFlight Magazine, “Making Miracles,” by A. Averyl Re

January 2010

Shelley Saunders Eatherly, a 22-year veteran flight attendant based in Newark, loves to share her passion for travel with her children—daughter Rickie Le, 13, and son Jack, 12. She has become particularly fond of India, after her brother suggested she travel there to volunteer with The Miracle Foundation.

http://magazine.continental.com/201001-co-notebook

   

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Om Times Magazine, “Compassion in Action: Caroline Boudreaux”

January 2010

Caroline Boudreaux is the Founder and Executive Director of The Miracle Foundation, which was born as a labor of love after she visited India for the first time in 2000. She was taking a one-year sabbatical from her job in television advertising; although she had enjoyed career success, it lacked meaning and purpose to Caroline. India was one stop on an around-the-world journey she was taking with a friend.

http://www.miraclefoundation.org/TMF/projects/docs/OmTimes.pdf

   

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Your Austin Lifestyle, “Gifts that Give: Austin’s Tradition of Giving”

December 2009

Founders of two organizations started in Austin with global outreach and projects that have a lasting impact look at beginning a new family tradition; giving gifts that help others.

Read more.

 

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India Abroad, “Teardrops on the Cheek of Time,” by Prem Panicker

August 7, 2009

When Shelley Seale first met Santosh in 2005, he was nine years old- and painfully shy.  He had arrived at the orphanage in Orissa when he was turning two.  His mother had died; his father had remarried and - in the trite language officialdom uses to describe waht for a small child is a cataclysmic event, the father 'was staying in another place leaving Santosh helpless and along, because the second mother of Santosh did not agree to keep the child with her.'

http://weightofsilence.files.wordpress.com/2009/08/indiaabroad.pdf

 



Past Issues of our Newsletter (PDF)

 

 

 

Volume 6, Issue 3 (Sept. 2009)

Volume 6, Issue 1 (Feb. 2009)

Volume 5, Issue 3 (Nov. 2008)

Volume 5, Issue 2 (June 2008)

Volume 5, Issue 1 (Jan. 2008)

 

 

 

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