Help enrol 3,000 teenage girls

Help us achieve our ambitious goal of reaching 3,000 teenage girls in conflict-affected countries by the end of 2025.

With the #SheDares Matching Gift Challenge, every donation will be DOUBLED. A gift of £10 will turn into £20 and £50 into £100. Donate today to double your impact at no extra cost to you.

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Donate Adolescent Girls Programme

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#SheDares To be more than her story

Her story is her strength not her identity

Our new Adolescent Girls Programme is designed to address the unique needs of teenage girls aged 16-17 living in countries affected by war and conflict. Adolescence is a crucial time of physical, emotional and social change. Sadly, many adolescent girls, especially in conflict-affected regions, face extreme poverty, gender-based violence and limited access to education.

The girls we serve dare to keep on dreaming and are working towards transforming their lives against the odds. Help us reach 3,000 teenage girls by the end of 2025. 

Every donation made between 12th and 21st November will be DOUBLED.

Donate £25 minimum and receive a limited edition #SheDares bracelet handmade by women survivors of war AND our first-ever Women for Women International calendar.

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85p of every £1 we spend goes directly to support women survivors of war. 15p helps to fund essential running costs.

Donate to support girls who to dare to change their future

Josephine

subtitle:

"I dare to fulfil my dreams despite being a teenage mother." After being sexually abused by a family friend, Josephine became pregnant and had to drop out of school at just 15 years old. Completing Women for Women International Rwanda's Adolescent Girls Programme helped her improve her life. She's now planning on working as a hairdresser and saving money to return to school.


Harir

subtitle:

"I dare to keep learning despite being banned from education." Harir, an Afghan girl, always dreamt of becoming a doctor despite growing up in a financially struggling family. Her determination strengthened after earning top marks in school, but the Taliban's takeover in 2021 crushed her access to education. Despite being rejected from a midwifery course and battling depression, she continues to secretly study English and medicine.


Nerat

subtitle:

"I dare to take control of my future." Nerat was abducted and forced into early marriage. Aged just 14, she had to leave school and focus on being a wife, taking care of her household and eventually caring for a baby. Joining our Adolescent Girls Programme is a ray of hope for a brighter future.