
Childhood
"When I was a child, my family had no money. We had to leave the countryside and move to the city," said Pissey, 23, a former beneficiary of PSE programs. "During the first year in Phnom Penh, we didn't know what to do so I lived in the garbage dump. I would go there to find plastic or aluminum that I could sell. After that, my parents started selling food out of the factories. All my brothers and sisters had to stay home to help my parents prepare the food."
It was finally in 2006 that Pissey joined PSE and began his education. "When I first arrived at school, for the first time in my life, I had rice and food. I cried because I had never had all this before!" she recalls. "Even though I was already 8 years old, I couldn't read books because I couldn't write Khmer."
The future
Today, Pissey shares his skills by teaching students at our school. Her dream? To open a restaurant in Phnom Penh where she hopes to gain fame thanks to her talents as a Chef!
A success possible thanks to sponsorship
Since the beginning of their actions in Cambodia, Christian and Marie-France des Pallières, the founders of PSE, have chosen to rely on sponsorships to ensure the sustainability of the association's programs. The commitment we make to the children is strong: we lead them from misery to a profession!
The comprehensive care we offer to the children is long-term. We commit ourselves to the end and do not leave any child by the side of the road.