Angelina Jolie And Brad Pitt's Daughters Follow Parents' Footsteps? Gives Clothes To Cambodian Kids

by Siegred Jade Lastimoso / Jan 14, 2016 09:56 PM EST
Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt's daughters are clearly taking after their famous parents as the youngsters recently donated clothes to unfortunate children in Cambodia.

Their eldest daughters, Shiloh, 9, and Zahara, 11, apparently sponsored a family of Cambodian slum children, Daily Mail reported

The Shoun family lives in a small tin shack in Siem Reap, a tourist town where Angko Wat can be found. There were 13 children and only Leida, sixteen-years old, and her brother, Ploy, eight years old, were the only ones who speak english.

"I play with Shiloh or Zahara. They meet us in Siem Reap town and we all play together. They are all very nice people. I like it when we play ball," Vanity Fair quoted Leida.

"We only had one bicycle for the entire family and it was old, so for us this is an amazing gift," Shoun added.

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt not only inspired their daughters by giving gifts to a family in Cambodia, but the couple is said to be in the process of adopting another child from the family, Allouy Shoun, the youngest at only 16-months old.

The 'Mr. and Mrs. Smith' stars already have six children.

According to Movie Pilot, if the adoption pushes through, this will be the fourth child adopted by Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt, who have already provided a new home for Maddox (14, Cambodia), Zahara (11, Ethiopia) and Pax (12, Vietnam).

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt, meanwhile, are not pressuring their children into taking up their advocacies, but among their daughters, it seems that Shiloh is taking after her mother.

As quoted in Vogue, "Last April, Jolie Pitt watched her now nine-year-old daughter Shiloh among refugees in Lebanon."

"When she was sitting on the floor with her UN cap writing her notes as she was talking to someone, I was flashing on myself fifteen years ago and thinking, I know that moment," Angelina Jolie said.

"But she also knows that it may not be the same for all her children, and she doesn't push. The Jolie-Pitt world is democratic, eclectic. The kids that don't want to go don't go," the article said of the UN ambassador's humanitarian field trips.

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