Six years ago, Xuân Duy graduated from the Foreign Trade University in Hồ Chí Minh City, one of the most prestigious universities in southern Vietnam and across the country. His academic journey, however, began under challenging circumstances.
Duy first learned about saigonchildren through his mum, who had contacted one of our staff members. After hearing about the family’s difficulties, we offered him a full scholarship, covering tuition fees from secondary school through to university, along with school essentials such as backpacks, notebooks, pens, and textbooks.
“I was truly grateful. The support was not a small amount, and saigonchildren was able to give that same help to many other students like me, not just one.”
Through all those years, Duy focused on what mattered most: learning. At university, he balanced classes with part-time jobs and joined several student clubs, and his commitment to his studies ultimately paid off.
While this meant he wasn’t deeply involved in the saigonchildren student community, Duy didn’t miss the chance to join our Mentoring Programme during his first year. He might not have known then that this decision would bring him lifelong experiences and lessons, as he was paired with the director of a popular English centre.
“Back then, I thought going to university was simply about earning money in the future, helping my family, and looking after myself. But through the programme, I got to connect with people who had already walked that road. especially came with the same background. That opportunity was even more valuable than financial support. I learned a lot of him, from mindset to skills, and so on.”
Still, he couldn’t help wondering why someone so busy would mentor a first-year student like him. The answer came much later, when his mentor shared his own story: he too had been guided by someone in the past, and when he asked how to repay that kindness, his mentor said simply: “Just help others. Pay it forward.”
That moment planted a seed that stayed with Duy for years.
After graduation, Duy built an impressive career, becoming a Strategy Consultant at KPMG Vietnam. Recently, we invited him to run skill workshops for current scholarship students. His answer came without hesitation: yes.
He now supports students in CV writing and interview skills, tools that can open doors to careers, just as mentoring once opened doors for him. After one recent workshop, around 10 students sent him their CVs and asked for personalised feedback.
“I was delighted,” Duy said. “As long as the charity, and the students, raise an idea or need that I can support within my possibilities, I’ll do it. I can also ask in my connection if someone qualified to do that, then I would connect you two.”
Looking back on his journey, Duy sees a full circle: from receiving support in both tangible and intangible ways, to passing those gifts on to the next generation.
“Now, more than ten years after I first received support from saigonchildren in material things, in spirit, and in so much more. I’ve reached a place where I have a stable job that I love. I want to live by that same spirit, to come back and help others.”
Duy with Miss Phương, the social worker in saigonchildren’s scholarship programme he is closest to.