Care for the Vulnerable
Oeuvre Humanitaire Emmanuel Orphanage
Several members of Mennonite Church of Congo started the orphanage in response to the problem of unattended street children in Kinshasa. The church members were inspired by the AIMM orphanage in Kahemba where they grew up. Currently the orphanage cares for around 35 children and young people in Kinshasa from ages six to twenty. The resources needed to run the orphanage are generated by a group of committed supporters in Congo and North America.
Kasai Relief Project
TSHIKAPA, The Democratic Republic of Congo (Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission/Mennonite Mission Network/Mennonite Central Committee) – Overt violence in the Kasaï region has diminished during the past year. According to Reuters, as many as 5,000 people died and an estimated 1.5 million were forced from their homes from violence perpetrated by Kamuina Nsapu rebels, Bana Mura militia, and the Congolese army from mid-2016 through 2017. Approximately 1.5 million people fled into the forest and eventually found their way to the relative safety of larger cities.
According to Mennonite Central Committee (MCC), 897,476 people are currently displaced in the Kasai region, with 362,301 displaced in Kasai province where the Mennonite Church of Congo is located. In Lomami province, where the Evangelical Mennonite Church is based, 252,9018 people are displaced. |
The Kikwit province, where the Mennonite Brethren Church of Congo is based, has also seen a large influx of displaced people.
Agricultural production has been severely disrupted over this two-year period, and 3.2 million people remain without sufficient food as a result. The social and economic conditions that gave rise to the violence have not changed, said Rod Hollinger-Janzen, executive coordinator of Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission, who has made three visits to the Kasaï provinces since 2016.
"There needs to be positive investment in the future of this region through spiritual renewal, peacemaking and community reconstruction, economic development, and job creation in order for peoples' hopes to be renewed," said Hollinger-Janzen.
Congolese Mennonite and Mennonite Brethren churches continue to work with the Inter-Mennonite Kasaï Relief Project led by MCC and supported by seven other supporting organizations, including Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission. During the past year, churches in Kabwela, Kikwit, and Tshikapa have worked with the relief project that includes providing food, education, farming supplies, and trauma healing workshops to people displaced by the violence.
The churches began distribution of food, hygiene items, and tarps in November 2017 to 460 households, and continued with food packages containing flour, beans, oil and salt from April 2018 through today. Food distributions, paid for through MCC's account at the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, will continue through March 2019.
Strengthened by the continuing supply of emergency food, 700 families will use pigs, or the tools, seeds and land provided through the project to start supporting themselves. In Kabwela, cowpeas are already in the ground and others will be planted in January.
In addition, the Congolese churches used funds from the supporting groups to purchase school supplies and uniforms and to pay for school fees for about 950 children, who started school in September.
Congolese trauma practitioners from eastern Congo taught 17 displaced people from all three Kasai churches how to lead community-based trauma healing workshops for their peers.
As part of the three-day workshops, the newly trained leaders explain to participants what trauma is and how it manifests itself in destructive behaviors. Leaders create safe space for group members to talk about their personal traumatic experiences and to grieve with each other before they think about how to move on with their lives.
Participating organizations include Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission, French Mennonite Relief Agency, International Community of Mennonite Brethren, MB Mission, Mennonite Central Committee, Mennonite Church Canada, Mennonite Mission Network, and Mennonite World Conference.
Agricultural production has been severely disrupted over this two-year period, and 3.2 million people remain without sufficient food as a result. The social and economic conditions that gave rise to the violence have not changed, said Rod Hollinger-Janzen, executive coordinator of Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission, who has made three visits to the Kasaï provinces since 2016.
"There needs to be positive investment in the future of this region through spiritual renewal, peacemaking and community reconstruction, economic development, and job creation in order for peoples' hopes to be renewed," said Hollinger-Janzen.
Congolese Mennonite and Mennonite Brethren churches continue to work with the Inter-Mennonite Kasaï Relief Project led by MCC and supported by seven other supporting organizations, including Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission. During the past year, churches in Kabwela, Kikwit, and Tshikapa have worked with the relief project that includes providing food, education, farming supplies, and trauma healing workshops to people displaced by the violence.
The churches began distribution of food, hygiene items, and tarps in November 2017 to 460 households, and continued with food packages containing flour, beans, oil and salt from April 2018 through today. Food distributions, paid for through MCC's account at the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, will continue through March 2019.
Strengthened by the continuing supply of emergency food, 700 families will use pigs, or the tools, seeds and land provided through the project to start supporting themselves. In Kabwela, cowpeas are already in the ground and others will be planted in January.
In addition, the Congolese churches used funds from the supporting groups to purchase school supplies and uniforms and to pay for school fees for about 950 children, who started school in September.
Congolese trauma practitioners from eastern Congo taught 17 displaced people from all three Kasai churches how to lead community-based trauma healing workshops for their peers.
As part of the three-day workshops, the newly trained leaders explain to participants what trauma is and how it manifests itself in destructive behaviors. Leaders create safe space for group members to talk about their personal traumatic experiences and to grieve with each other before they think about how to move on with their lives.
Participating organizations include Africa Inter-Mennonite Mission, French Mennonite Relief Agency, International Community of Mennonite Brethren, MB Mission, Mennonite Central Committee, Mennonite Church Canada, Mennonite Mission Network, and Mennonite World Conference.
|
We continue to work together with MCC, Mennonite Mission Network, and other groups on a combined and collaborative response. Your support continues to be crucial in this situation! Give online or send checks by mail to AIMM, P.O. Box 744, Goshen, IN 46527 for gifts in USD; or to AIMM Canada, 440 Main St., Steinbach, MB R5G 1Z5 for gifts in CAD. Designate your contribution for "Kasai Relief."
|