05/06/2026
CEO MESSAGE
Over the past several years, our Foundation has reviewed thousands of scholarship applications, welfare requests, disability support cases, and humanitarian appeals from individuals across different communities.
Behind every application is a human story.
Some applicants are academically outstanding despite enormous hardship. Others have faced barriers that traditional measures of success rarely capture. These experiences have led us to reflect on difficult questions about merit, opportunity, vulnerability, fairness, and compassion.
The message below is not intended to provide answers to all these questions. Rather, it is an invitation to think more deeply about how we treat those who are often overlooked, excluded, or forgotten.
Dr Alex Yuan
Communication Director
(The message below is directly from our CEO @ Le Professuer Anthuan Udokwu
REMEMBER THEM — YAHWEH STILL REMEMBERS THEM
Today, I want to ask a few uncomfortable questions.
Questions I have carried for many years.
Questions that became louder every time I met another orphan, another disabled child, another hungry student, another person rejected by a system that claimed to be compassionate.
How do we measure merit in an unequal society?
How do we decide who deserves help?
Who gave us the authority to determine the worth of another human being?
When scholarship bodies say they reward "the best students," what exactly does that mean?
The student with the highest GPA?
Or the student who studied while hungry?
The student with perfect grades?
Or the blind student who fought every day simply to remain in school?
The student with every opportunity?
Or the orphan who had to survive before they could learn?
Can excellence be measured without considering inequality?
Can compassion be measured?
Who decides how much compassion is enough?
Who decides where compassion begins and where it ends?
Who decides which suffering deserves support and which suffering deserves rejection?
If a disabled student is rejected because their grades are too low, yet their grades were shaped by barriers others never faced, was the process truly fair?
Or merely efficient?
If a poor child performs worse than a wealthy child, are we measuring ability?
Or are we measuring privilege?
These questions matter.
Because behind every application is a human being.
Behind every rejection is a story.
And behind every statistic is a life.
REMEMBER THEM.
Remember the poor.
Remember the hungry.
Remember those sleeping outside tonight with nobody checking whether they are alive.
Remember the widows.
Remember the orphans.
Remember the disabled.
Remember the rejected.
Remember the people your friends laugh at.
Remember the people society calls useless.
Remember the people you secretly believe are beneath you.
Remember those who walk differently.
Speak differently.
Look different.
Remember them.
Yahweh remembers them.
Remember the girl who was abused and carries the shame of a crime she never committed.
Remember the boy who cries himself to sleep because nobody sees his pain.
Remember the child who studies under candlelight.
Remember the student who missed classes because there was no food at home.
Remember the blind student.
Remember the wheelchair user.
Remember the person whose disability became the reason people stopped listening to them.
Yahweh remembers them.
Remember the people you hate.
The people who hurt you.
The people who disappointed you.
The people who never helped you when you needed help.
Remember them too.
Because Yahweh still remembers them.
You are not Yahweh.
You are not the Alpha.
You are not the Omega.
You do not hold the oceans in your hands.
You do not command the stars.
You do not give breath.
You cannot stop death.
You do not know the battles hidden behind another person's smile.
You do not hear the prayers whispered through tears at midnight.
You do not know how close someone is to giving up.
So stop acting like a small god in the lives of other people.
Stop demanding worship because you have money.
Stop expecting people to bow because you have influence.
Stop treating your position as though it makes you superior.
Your blessings were never meant to become weapons.
Your education was never meant to become arrogance.
Your success was never meant to become cruelty.
Your influence was never meant to become oppression.
Yahweh kept you alive so that you could lift others, not look down on them.
One day your titles will disappear.
One day your certificates will gather dust.
One day your bank account will belong to someone else.
One day your strength will fail.
One day your voice will go silent.
One day your body will return to the dust from which it came.
And only Yahweh will remain.
So be careful how you judge people.
Be careful how you reject people.
Be careful how you define worth.
Because one day the poor, the disabled, the orphan, the widow, the rejected and the forgotten will stand before the same Yahweh as you.
And I suspect He will not ask us how many people admired us.
He may ask how many people we ignored.
So before you judge...
Remember them.
Before you reject...
Remember them.
Before you decide who deserves compassion...
Remember them.
Because even when society forgets them...
Even when institutions reject them...
Even when the world turns its back on them...
YAHWEH STILL REMEMBERS THEM.