She continues: "I think it is so important for our boys to see the work that World Vision is doing and that there are parts of the world that are struggling. I want them to know we can do so much good -- with our time, our energy, our money -- to be able to help people in need. I find it crucial to display acts of kindness and charitable behavior in front of our kids. I really enjoyed having them with me the last time I went into the field with World Vision and they saw first-hand the impact and value of what giving back and providing for a community looks like. I believe we're called to it, and my husband and I want our children to learn what gifts they have and how they can share it. As they grow, they can be a shining light to others and that's so important."
After working with World Vision, "a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to helping children, families, and communities overcome poverty and injustice, as well as responding to urgent disasters like Hurricanes Helene and Milton in the U.S. and humanitarian crises around the world," for quite some time, Hart loves "knowing" the donations are making a "lasting impact on children and their communities."
"I have witnessed the very complex and beneficial systems that World Vision provides - including access to clean water and food - and their focus is on solutions that are sustainable and life-changing. I have gone to the field twice to see their work first-hand and it's had a profound impact on me and my family. World Vision works in nearly 100 countries including some of the hardest places in the world to be a child. Through World Vision's work, every 60 seconds a family gets the tools to overcome poverty. I love all kinds of community outreach on a local and wider level, and with World Vision I am able to do both because of their global presence," she explains.