Remote Area Development

Empowering Indonesia’s Most Isolated Communities

Bringing education, healthcare, and infrastructure to regions long left behind.

The Challenge

Where the Nation’s Progress Has Yet to Reach

Although Indonesia gained independence in 1945, many remote and mountainous regions—especially in Papua—remain untouched by national development. More than 87% of villages lack access to proper education and healthcare. Most children have never seen the inside of a classroom. Medical services are miles—often days—away. These communities, hidden among forests and peaks, are not forgotten by us.

What We Do

Our Approach to Remote Area Development

Education Access

Building and operating schools in the heart of remote villages, including 10 schools in Papua with over 80 teachers and 1,200 students.

Rural Healthcare Clinics

Free clinics providing essential care for 10,000+ patients annually: check-ups, immunizations, stunting prevention, and more.

Infrastructure for Daily Life

Delivering electricity, phone & internet connectivity, clean water, and agricultural systems.

Spotlight – Papua

Transforming Lives in Indonesia’s Eastern Frontier

Papua is home to one of the lowest Human Development Index scores in Indonesia. Through our deep, long-term commitment, we are changing that.

10 operational schools in Papua’s interior

7 healthcare clinics serving remote communities
Nutrition, health education, and home visits

Partnership-Driven Impact

We Go Farther When We Go Together

Progress in isolated regions is only possible through collaboration. We work with local governments, community leaders, educators, healthcare workers, and faith-based organizations to create sustainable, community-rooted solutions.

Long-Term Vision

From Isolation to Inclusion

By extending education, healthcare, and connectivity to remote regions, we are not only saving lives—we are preparing the next generation to lead their own communities forward. Our work is guided by a belief that true national progress leaves no one behind.

We go where others don’t—to serve those who are often unseen.