On Thursday afternoon, tornadoes started popping up in Oklahoma from a storm system that was heading to the deep south. By Saturday, the storm had reserved its worse destruction for North Carolina and Virginia where hundreds of homes had been destroyed or severely damaged. Fatalities were reported across the region and untold numbers have been injured. Continue reading 'Operation Compassion Responds to Tornado Outbreak'»
In Tonga, South Africa, there is a Children’s Home and Feeding Center that cares for children infected with HIV/AIDS at birth. The government of South Africa calls this area “The World’s Capital for HIV/AIDS” with more than 50% of the children infected at birth by one of its parents. In addition, they also feed children that are in need without HIV/AIDS.
Continue reading 'Operation Compassion in Tonga, South Africa'»

The Tsunami destruction
Operation Compassion has been deeply involved in disaster relief since its inception; sending thousands of semis of products and supplies directly to the affected areas or regions. Our first response is to send financial assistance to our long term partners to purchase urgent supplies.
Continue reading 'Operation Compassion Helps Japan Through Crisis'»
Operation Compassion received a very large donation of vegetable seeds designated for third world countries. These seeds will prove to be a valuable contribution on two economic fronts for these countries. Continue reading 'Vegetable Seeds Provide Food and Economic Growth'»
Forbes.com, the premier online magazine, has just named Operation Compassion for the second consecutive time in their annual America’s 200 Largest Charities survey. Out of 1.4 million charities in the United States, Operation Compassion was listed #1 with 100% of our expenses going directly to our global programs. This category calculates how much of the total expenses went to charitable purposes verses program overhead or charity efficiency. Three other charities tied with the #1 ranking.
Continue reading 'Operation Compassion Named Most Efficient Charity by Forbes.com'»