How OpenHands Foundation is connecting Filipino children to essential services

For thousands of children in the Philippines, access to education, healthcare, and basic public services begins with a single document: a birth certificate. Without legal recognition, children can remain excluded from public systems, limiting their access to rights, protection, and education. Through its “Second Birthday” initiative, OpenHands Foundation is helping children without legal identity secure official recognition that can connect them to essential services and reshape their futures.

This belief has guided OpenHands Foundation, a Seoul-based nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting the healthy growth and basic rights of children in underserved communities across Asia. The organization began its work in the Philippines in 2013 through the Water Kit Support Project, helping families gain access to clean drinking water so children could grow up healthy and pursue better opportunities.

But as the organization worked closely with communities, it encountered a barrier that clean water alone could not solve.

The centers are supported by Korean partners, including the Purini Foundation which also provides training for the teachers.

When children have no legal identity

In the communities it served, the organization noticed children who were not attending school and appeared disconnected from basic services. It later discovered that many of these children had never been registered at birth, preventing them from accessing not only education, but also healthcare and other essential public services. Birth registration can be a complex process, particularly for families in remote villages or urban poor communities that may lack awareness of requirements, necessary documentation, or access to government offices.

In response, OpenHands launched its Birth Registration Support Program in 2021, focusing on communities where its water projects were already in place. For the organization, the day a child receives a birth certificate represents a turning point—one it calls a “Second Birthday.”

As of 2026, OpenHands is assisting more than 1,400 children through the registration process, with hundreds of certificates already issued. These documents have enabled children to enroll in school, receive healthcare, and participate more fully in their communities.

A mom in Tondo receives birth certificates for her kids.

A second birthday: Jennie’s story

One such second birthday belonged to the sons of Jennie Tayag, a young mother living in Tondo. At just 24 years old, Jennie is raising her two young sons—Benjean, 6, and Bejames, 4— lin a fragile stilt house built over the water.

From birth, both children had no legal identity. Without registration, Jennie could not enroll them in day care, seek consistent healthcare, or plan for their education. With guidance and long-term support from OpenHands’ Second Birthday initiative, the family navigated nearly two years of documentation and preparation. On March 12, Jennie finally received her sons’ birth certificates.

Securing the registrations changed more than her children’s prospects. It reopened a future Jennie could imagine for herself. When asked what she wanted to do once her children begin school, she said, “I want to study again.”

The center also serves as a venue for training teachers.

Expanding to early childhood care

To ensure children thrive beyond legal recognition, OpenHands is also expanding its work in early childhood care and education. The organization operates day care centers near Manila, providing safe and structured learning environments for children in underserved communities.

In March, OpenHands opened two new day care centers: one in Barangay Calawis, Antipolo City, and another in the CAMC community in Bacoor. The centers are supported by Korean partners, including Puruni Foundation, which provides teacher training, and WithNaver, a volunteer group formed by employees of Naver.

Kevin Cho, executive director of OpenHands, said that visiting the birth registration support site and attending the opening of the new day care centers reaffirmed the importance of the organization’s work.

“Through the DCC, we hope this space will become a place where children can grow, learn, and prepare for their future,” Cho said.

He added that OpenHands will continue working closely with partners and supporters in Korea and the Philippines to help children grow up healthy and pursue better opportunities in the future.

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