Fidelity Bank orphanage support brings renovated facilities, school fees and food supplies to Heritage Homes in Lagos through employee-led CSR
Leading financial institution Fidelity Bank Plc has strengthened its commitment to community development by delivering a comprehensive welfare intervention at Heritage Homes Orphanage in Anthony Village, Lagos, providing infrastructure upgrades, educational support and food assistance in an initiative designed to improve the lives of vulnerable children.
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The intervention, carried out under the bank’s flagship Fidelity Helping Hands Programme (FHHP), brought together newly inducted employees known as the Audacious Class, who identified the orphanage’s most pressing needs, mobilised resources and implemented the project with matching support from the bank.
Rather than limiting the exercise to donations, the initiative focused on long-term improvements.
The intervention included the replacement of damaged roofing and POP ceilings, fumigation of the facility, provision of essential food items and payment of school fees for some of the children.
The project reflects Fidelity Bank’s employee-driven approach to corporate social responsibility, where members of staff are encouraged to champion causes within their communities while the institution provides additional financial backing to maximise impact.
Speaking during the outreach, the Divisional Head of Brand and Communications at Fidelity Bank, Dr Meksley Nwagboh, described the programme as a practical demonstration of the bank’s belief that sustainable social impact begins with empowering employees to support meaningful community projects.
“This is what the Fidelity Helping Hands Programme is about. It gives our employees the opportunity to contribute their time, resources and talents towards improving lives in the communities where we operate.
The Audacious Class identified Heritage Homes Orphanage, assessed their most pressing needs and implemented three key interventions, infrastructural renovation, food donation and payment of school fees.”
Dr Nwagboh said the intervention had delivered transformative results by providing the children with safer accommodation, improved welfare and uninterrupted access to education.
“Today, these children have a secure roof over their heads, access to essential food supplies and the assurance that their education will continue.
This is the kind of sustainable impact the Fidelity Helping Hands Programme was designed to achieve.”
For the management of Heritage Homes, the support arrived at a crucial moment.
Assistant General Manager of the orphanage, Irene Light, described the intervention as timely and deeply reassuring for both the children and caregivers.
“We sincerely appreciate Fidelity Bank for this remarkable act of kindness.
They completely renovated our roof, replaced the damaged POP ceiling, fumigated the home, provided food items and, most importantly, paid the school fees of some of our children.
Their generosity has brought relief, comfort and renewed hope to everyone in this home.”
Light added that beyond improving the physical condition of the orphanage, the project had restored dignity to the facility and created a safer, healthier environment for the children.
The outreach also highlights the growing role of employee-led corporate volunteering in Nigeria’s financial sector.
Rather than relying solely on centrally designed CSR programmes, institutions are increasingly giving staff the opportunity to identify local challenges and participate directly in delivering solutions.
The Fidelity Helping Hands Programme follows that model by encouraging employees to contribute financially and personally to community projects, with the bank matching their contributions to expand the reach and sustainability of each intervention.
The latest initiative reinforces Fidelity Bank Orphanage Support as part of the lender’s broader social investment strategy, which spans education, health, youth empowerment, entrepreneurship and community development.
Fidelity Bank serves more than 10 million customers through its digital banking platforms, 255 business offices across Nigeria and its United Kingdom subsidiary, FidBank UK Limited.
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The bank has also continued to receive industry recognition for its performance and social impact. In 2025, it won the Development Bank of Nigeria Innovation Award for MSME support, BusinessDay’s Best Bank for Export and Trade Finance, Euromoney’s Nigeria’s Best Private Bank, alongside several other honours recognising innovation, customer service and community empowerment.
Oreoluwa is an accountant and a brand writer with a flair for journalism.






















