Giving Circle Update
May 2026

The Giving Circle has picked its first two projects.

The Giving Circle Team has been working with two groups on their projects to present to you for a vote in this first round of the GAP Fund: Grace Sim with Morlivly (Tualang honey in Malaysia) and Daniel John with Biliroo (low cost phototherapy for newborn jaundice).

The Year 1 fund size is approximately $20,000, with the goal of $30,000 by the end of the year. We are still finalizing the arrangements with both founders. The intent is to keep Year 1 simple and revisit the structure in early 2027 once we have a year of real experience behind us.

The Year 1 arrangement is an idea I picked up from one of our teachers, a senior executive in Cluj, Romania. He recommended that in the first year we sign founders to a "Founders Pledge" to support the work of Resource Global as they grow in revenue rather than complicate things with equity, loans, or convertible notes.

$20,000
raised toward $30,000 Year 1 goal
The Founders Pledge
A moral agreement, not a legal one.

If their company succeeds, the founder commits to donate a percentage back to their local RG chapter to fund the next generation. No equity. No loans. No legal entanglement. Just a hand-shake and a heart for the Gospel.

· · ·
Morlivly
A towering Tualang tree in the Malaysian rainforest, with rows of wild bee hives draped along its branches.
A single Tualang tree in the Malaysian rainforest, with wild bee hives draped along its branches.
Tualang Honey · Malaysia

What Grace is building.

Grace Sim, founder of Morlivly · Resource Global Malaysia alumni

Grace is a Resource Global Malaysia alumni. Tualang honey is her Gospel Action Plan: building a sustainable honey product line out of Southeast Asia through her work with farmers in Malaysia through her startup, Morlivly.

Indigenous foragers climb a Tualang tree at night with torches to harvest honey from wild hives.
Indigenous foragers climb at night, when the bees are calmer.

What makes Tualang honey different.

Tualang honey is a really rare wild honey from Malaysia. It comes from these massive Koompassia trees deep in the rainforest, and the only way to get it is for indigenous foragers to climb up and harvest it by hand. You can't farm it.

Tualang honey tests higher in antioxidants and flavonoids than Manuka honey (which most people think of as the gold standard). It's known to help with stamina, inflammation, and immune recovery.

What the research and tradition point to

Why people seek out Tualang honey.

  • Naturally high in antioxidants and flavonoids
  • Traditionally used to support immunity
  • Helps soothe coughs and sore throats
  • Studied for wound-healing properties
  • May help support healthy blood sugar levels
  • Traditionally used to support heart health

Based on published research on Tualang honey and traditional use in Malaysia. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Why I'm excited about Grace's approach.

Grace is using indigenous farming methods that actually help REVERSE deforestation. So the local First Nation communities in Borneo have a real economic reason to protect the rainforest instead of selling it off for palm oil.

What she's asking for.

From the GAP Fund, Grace is asking for $10,000 to help support the next phase of Morlivly's growth.

$10,000
GAP Fund ask · Year 1
Raw Tualang honey pouring from a freshly harvested honeycomb through a filter into a glass vessel.
Raw honey, filtered straight from the comb. No farming. No processing.
Biliroo
BiliRoo research poster: a kangaroo care carrier with sunlight phototherapy. Shows the product being worn, methodology, and key study results.
BiliRoo research summary: a kangaroo care carrier with filtered sunlight phototherapy. Daniel's research poster, with the product being worn and key study results.
Phototherapy for Newborns

What Daniel is building.

Daniel John, founder of Biliroo · US medical student

Daniel John is a US medical student building Biliroo, a low cost phototherapy device for newborn jaundice. It replaces a traditional electric blue light machine with a cloth sling and filter that harnesses sunlight, making treatment accessible in low-resource settings.

Key study results · Bench model

BiliRoo filters UV and delivers therapeutic blue light.

>99%
of harmful UV-A filtered out
Effective across both filter types tested, at all three caregiver angles.
3 / 3
caregiver angles passed threshold
Therapeutic blue light exceeded the intensive phototherapy threshold (>30 μW/cm²/nm) at 30°, 60°, and 90°.
10am–8pm
treatment window tested
Measured for Air Blue and Gila Titanium filters across a full day of sunlight conditions.

Study conclusion: BiliRoo effectively filters harmful UV while delivering adequate therapeutic blue light at a range of caregiver angles in a bench model. Next steps: usability testing and clinical feasibility, safety, and efficacy trials.

Why it matters.

Roughly 24 million newborns each year are at risk of complications from jaundice, and about 6 million don't have access to the phototherapy they need. The standard hospital machine costs thousands of dollars and requires reliable electricity. Biliroo's carrier brings the treatment to a parent's chest, with the sun doing the work, and keeps mother and baby in skin-to-skin contact throughout treatment.

What he's asking for.

Daniel needs to raise $300,000 for additional testing to bring the device to Africa. From the GAP Fund, he is asking for $10,000 to help support testing this summer.

$10,000
GAP Fund ask
$300,000
Total testing budget
Summer 2026
Africa testing window
· · ·

Do you approve the funding?

The Giving Circle is making its final decision on Year 1 funding for these two founders. Your vote matters. Cast it below, and add a comment if you have one. We will keep the form open through the end of May.

Morlivly

Tualang honey in Malaysia. Grace Sim, RG Malaysia alumni.

Biliroo

Low cost phototherapy for newborn jaundice. Daniel John, US medical student.

Cast Your Vote

Opens the GAP Circle Fund voting form in a new tab. Takes 30 seconds.

· · ·

Social Media One — Johannesburg.

A separate, self-funded project. Shared with you because it lives in the same vision.

socialmediaone.media Social Media One About Our Mission Who We Help Pricing Get Started AFRICAN TALENT · GLOBAL REACH Social Media That Actually Grows Your Audience A skilled team from South Africa, trained, dedicated, and ready to build your presence on Instagram, LinkedIn, and Facebook every single weekday. See Our Plans Learn More 5x Posts per week, every week 3 Platforms we master US Audience-focused content $300 Introductory rate, first 6 months
The site is live at socialmediaone.media

This is a related venture that Tommy Lee has launched. It does not need a GAP Fund grant, but it is part of the same vision for marketplace impact.

Social Media One is a social media agency built on a team of trained young Christian professionals in Johannesburg, South Africa, serving US organizations, companies, and leaders. We are also working to develop people who can build videos using AI and exploring what the role of an AI manager is.

Tommy is leading and self-funding the project. We trained an initial group of six and selected five of them to work on real client projects. The team is now in place and we are working to lock in the first US pilot clients.

Minimum wage in Johannesburg $1.60 / hr
Current unemployment rate ~60%
Initial trainees 6
Selected for client work 5
Funding source Self-funded