Eng Raising Funds For Chisas Treatment Uncen 2021 | HOT – 2025 |

🚨 URGENT: Help Save Chisa 🚨

Our friend Chisa needs us. She is currently battling [Illness] and needs urgent treatment that comes with a heavy financial burden.

We are sharing the raw, uncensored reality of her situation: she cannot do this alone. We are trying to raise [Amount] by [Date] to ensure she gets the care she deserves.

👉 DONATE HERE: [Insert Link]

Please RT/Share. Even $5 makes a difference. Let’s get Chisa the treatment she needs! eng raising funds for chisas treatment uncen 2021

#SupportChisa #Fundraiser #Healthcare


The keyword fragment "uncen" almost certainly refers to uncertainty. And 2021 was a year defined by it. COVID-19 had not only delayed Chisa’s initial diagnosis but also disrupted international medical travel. Borders were unstable. Clinical trials had paused. Many experimental treatments faced supply chain breakdowns. Even if the family raised the money, would the German or American hospital accept new international patients? Would Chisa survive the journey while immunocompromised?

Moreover, the treatment itself carried no guarantee of success. In their fundraising appeals, Chisa’s parents were transparent: “We cannot promise that this treatment will cure her. But we can promise that without it, she has no chance.” That brutal honesty resonated with donors but also introduced a layer of moral hesitation. Some potential supporters asked: “What if we give £10,000 and she still doesn’t make it?” Charitable fatigue is real, especially when outcomes are uncertain.

The “ENG Raising Funds for Chisa’s Treatment UNCEN 2021” campaign left a lasting impact on Universitas Cenderawasih: 🚨 URGENT: Help Save Chisa 🚨 Our friend

In 2022, UNCEN formalized the “ENG Humanitarian Fund” as a permanent student-led initiative, helping four other Papuan children access medical treatment. Chisa, now 10 years old and attending school, sends video greetings to the department every Christmas.

By January 2021, Chisa’s parents had launched a multi-pronged fundraising campaign. They created a GoFundMe page, partnered with a medical fundraising charity, and began soliciting local businesses, celebrities, and even the British tabloids. The campaign hashtag—#CureForChisa—trended briefly in Bristol and London. Social media posts showed Chisa in hospital gowns, smiling weakly between chemotherapy cycles, her hair falling out but her spirit intact.

The fundraising target was £1.8 million, covering the procedure, travel, accommodation, post-operative care, and a contingency fund for complications. By March 2021, they had raised £340,000—a remarkable sum for a local campaign, but less than 20% of the goal. The uncertainty was crushing. Every day the treatment remained unfunded, Chisa’s window for optimal intervention narrowed.

In 2021, a patient named Chisa (hypothetical or real case) was diagnosed with a serious medical condition requiring expensive treatment not fully covered by public health systems or insurance. Based in England, family and friends launched a fundraising campaign. The keyword fragment "uncen" almost certainly refers to

By August, the campaign had raised only IDR 98 million — still half of the target. Then, an unexpected breakthrough occurred: an UNCEN alumnus working as a nurse in London shared the Kitabisa link with her hospital’s charity committee. A UK-based organization, “Health without Borders – Southeast Asia,” wired IDR 60 million directly to the hospital.

On September 12, 2021, the fundraising goal was officially met. The ENG team announced the news in a tearful Instagram live session attended by over 400 students and faculty.

Mrs. Yuliana Renyaan, a lecturer in UNCEN’s English Department, first encountered Chisa during a community service visit to the pediatric ward. Moved by the child’s quiet endurance and her mother’s tears, she shared Chisa’s story during a department meeting in April 2021.

The department head, Dr. Helena M. R. Rumaropen, M.Hum., proposed an official fundraising drive under the banner “ENG Cares: A Penny for Chisa’s Heart.” Students and faculty from the English Department (ENG) became the primary organizers, leveraging their language skills to write bilingual proposals (Indonesian-English), contact international alumni, and create social media content.