FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “hand wash”

Showing 1 - 6 of 6

Image-Content

LIFE

Opening doors for the ordinary

Life, Father Joe Maier, Published on 15/04/2021

» To kick open the door only once -- and it stays open. That's what our Mercy Centre and Human Development Foundation does.

LIFE

From the muck andback into the muck, with a different purpose

Life, Father Joe Maier, Published on 01/06/2020

» It began with a slaughterhouse alumna of our oldest slum kindergarten. She's a young mum now and a heroine in our war on Covid-19. But just a short time ago, she was in a spot of bother. In fact, several spots of bother.

Image-Content

THAILAND

A fire fails to destroy community's spirit

Spectrum, Father Joe Maier, Published on 30/07/2017

» It was early morning, still dark, and "old granny", as the neighbours nicknamed her to distinguish her from a younger granny also living alone in the next-door shack, was saying her morning prayers by candlelight.

Image-Content

THAILAND

A slaughterhouse love story

Spectrum, Father Joe Maier, Published on 02/07/2017

» She's a slaughterhouse kindergarten teacher. Her whole life through and through. And her husband was a boy who grew up just over the footbridge crossing the canal to the other side, next to the temple. And her face becomes more beautiful day by day. Serene might be a better word. Her whole life of 48 years. She has been teaching slaughterhouse kindergarten children since her middle teens.

Image-Content

THAILAND

The broken wings of a fallen bird

Spectrum, Father Joe Maier, Published on 24/04/2016

» Galong, born with Down's syndrome, was of indeterminate age. He lived on the streets and worked as a "doorman" at a low-budget karaoke joint near the Pratunam market. Always a proper gentleman, he greeted us, shook our hands and in his gravelly voice asked, "How are you?"

THAILAND

Miss Dao and her amazing feats

Spectrum, Father Joe Maier, Published on 23/09/2012

» She has mostly had to learn everything herself. Mum couldn't be there for her, and Miss Dao also has to take care of Granny, as she'd promised her mother. You know, things like mixing her betel nut chaw and holding her hand crossing the street. She has three older half-brothers and a half-sister, but they aren't close. Her half-sister is married, and Dao only saw her once at the temple for her mother's cremation.