The Cambodian Family
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Board Members
    • Awards
    • Partnerships
  • Covid-19
  • Programs
    • Plan Ahead Youth Program
    • Community Health/Mental Health Programs
      • Healthy Changes Programs
      • Body, Mind and Spiritual Wellness Program
      • Cambodian Breast Health Education and Support Together
      • The Early Intervention Services for Older Adult Program
      • Benefits Enrollment Programs
      • Community Wellness Program
      • Minnie Street Family Resource Center
      • Residence Service Coordinator at Cornerstone Village
    • Citizenship Program
    • Civic Engagement and Advocacy
  • Calendar
  • Resources
    • Photo Gallery
    • Video Gallery
    • Media/Public Archives
    • Annual Report
  • Join Our Team
    • Job Opportunities
    • Volunteer
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
  • Menu Menu

About Us

Mission Statement

The mission of The Cambodian Family is to promote social health by providing refugee and immigrant families the opportunities to develop the knowledge, skills, and desires for creating health and well-being in their lives.

Vision

Our vision is to see refugee and immigrant families that are healthy, happy, self-reliant, and contributing members of society. The families we serve have good physical and mental health, satisfying jobs with good wages, kids who thrive in school, a sense of belonging to the larger community, and a comfortable community center of their own in which they take pride and feel strong support.

History

In the early 1980s, a large wave of Cambodian refugees who had escaped the “killing fields” of the Communist Khmer Rouge regime began coming to the United States.  Many came to Orange County and settled in the Minnie Street neighborhood of Santa Ana, California, where crowded apartment complexes offered some of the lowest rents in the County.

In 1982, the five Cambodian refugees who made up The Cambodian Family’s Board of Directors, along with a few other dedicated members, pooled resources, rented a small apartment, and began helping other Cambodians who lived in the neighborhood.  Those Cambodians who could speak some English provided free English classes, adjustment counseling, and emergency translation to their monolingual neighbors.

In 1983, we received our first funding, a $64,000 grant from the Federal Office of Refugee Resettlement, to provide Employment Services, and this program has continued to expand in scope and funding since that time.  As time passed, other programs were added in response to community needs, including ESL, vocational training, an after school Youth Program, an early childhood development program for school readiness, health accessing and trauma resolution.

Over the years, we have broadened our clientele from Cambodians only, to also include immigrants and refugees from all over the world, including Vietnam, Laos, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Russia, Ukraine, Bosnia, Ethiopia, and Somalia.

The Cambodian Family
1626 E. Fourth St. Santa Ana, CA 92701 | P: 714-571-1966

© Copyright 2025 – The Cambodian Family

  • facebook
  • youtube
  • instagram
  • twitter
Scroll to top