The Story of Kambove Community
Kambove is a mining community with a population of 36,000 people. When the mines closed, the local economy was devastated and the infrastructure broken. With thousands of people unemployed, Kambove saw a massive increase in prostitution, further exacerbating the spread of HIV/AIDS in the region. The mines in Kambove also polluted the water for people living in the community, leaving just one clean water source for the entire community to access. Many people use contaminated water for washing, cooking and drinking. Recognising the severity of the situation, Hands at Work mobilised individuals from the local churches in Kambove to establish a Community Based Organisation of volunteer Care Workers, committed to caring for the poorest of the poor. In 2009, the Maisha (meaning ‘life’) Community Based Organisation was born, the only group in all of Kambove actively caring for children.
175 Children currently supported
13 Care Workers coordinated by Aimerance
Basic Services Started in 2010
30 kM from the Likasi Local Office
With the support of the local Hands at Work team in Likasi, the Care Workers identified 100 orphaned and vulnerable children who were desperately in need of care and invited them to the Life Centre. Here they are supported with a hot, nutritious meal daily, education and basic health care and have the freedom to play as children. In addition to providing these basic necessities, the Care Workers are committed to visiting the children and their families in their homes, ensuring that they are physically, spiritually and emotionally cared for.
In 2019, a new Life Centre was constructed and life is springing up amongst the most vulnerable in Kambove. In 2020, a new, secure toilet was completed, ensuring the health and hygiene of the most vulnerable. Always pressing in to reach the poorest of the poor, the Care Workers from Maisha Community Based Organisation have done a number of reassessments of the children to ensure that they are reaching those who are the most vulnerable. These reassessments have led to an increase of 100 to 175 children being cared for.
The local Hands at Work team in Likasi currently supports seven Community Based Organisations, which exist to care for the most vulnerable in their communities. The office provides training, networking, and encouragement to those Community Based Organisations like Maisha. It also gives administrative support, including helping with funding proposals, monitoring and evaluation, bookkeeping and reporting to donors.
BE INSPIRED BY UPDATES FROM KAmbove COMMUNITY
Paulina* has been coming to the Kambove Care Point for the past ten years and the Care Workers are like mothers to her. Because of the love and kindness she has received from these women, Paulina is an example to others by leading worship, leading the youth, sharing God’s word and praying for others. Care Worker Maman says, “I feel like a parent to her. Whenever Paulina is facing difficulties, she feels free to come and share them with me.”
“Relationship Groups have changed my life! I used to struggle with bitterness and anger but now I am able to share freely with the other Care Workers about what is challenging me at home and it has helped me to move past those feelings. They have also helped me grow spiritually.” - Venomigue, a Care Worker in Kambove Community, Democratic Republic of the Congo
15-year-old Gracia* likes to help out with the dishes at the Care Point. She has seen how the Care Workers have advocated on behalf of many other children in her community and so she feels safe knowing that they are there for her when she needs it most. - Kambove Community, Democratic Republic of the Congo
“I love the work that we do, and I believe that God has called me to serve the children. I feel so blessed to be called to this work. I was a Primary Caregiver and now I get to be part of a team of Care Workers who meet regularly to praise and worship and hear God's word in our Relationship Group. I am so grateful. My own life has been impacted as a Primary Caregiver and now as a Care Worker.” – Hortence is a Care Worker in Kambove Community, Democratic Republic of the Congo
During the recent Maranatha Workshop in Kambove Community (DRC) several of the youth committed their lives to Jesus. Praise God for the way that He has been working in their lives.
Maranatha Workshops are facilitated by Hands at Work for the Care Workers, Primary Caregivers and children, and are a place to share the 'Jesus We Know' and what it means to serve the most vulnerable.
Recently, a pit latrine toilet was constructed at the Care Point in the community of Kambove, Democratic Republic of Congo, as the previous one was becoming unsafe for the Care Workers and children to use. Having a new toilet goes a long way to improving the overall health and hygiene of the most vulnerable.
"Our God is a restorer of hope. A little over 12 months ago this grandmother was dying of hunger, along with her four great-grandchildren. She was lain in her field with her starving great-grandchild lying on top of her when Mama Emerance, one of our faithful Care Workers in Kambove Community, saw her and felt stirred to intervene in the situation. In November the Kambove Community Based Organsation (CBO), with the support of the Hands at Work local office team in Likasi, helped her to plant a field of maize. There have been some unforeseen challenges with the farming but at least the family has some food security for now. More than this, however, this grandmother has hope and a reason to get up each day to continue the good fight to care for her great-grandchildren. Her life is still very tough and the story is not yet finished but we trust that God's transforming power in her life will continue.”
Mel Warren, International Volunteer (Australia), shares about a grandmother who she met in March during her time in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Kambove Community, DRC
Liu*, is nine years old. In her short life, she has experienced great loss, which is not unlike many other children who have grown up in the vulnerable community of Kambove. After her father passed away, Liu’s mother struggled to cope with the responsibility of caring for her young children. In 2013, she fled the community and left her five children in the care of their great-grandmother, Theresa*. Theresa is in her late eighties and despite her best efforts, struggles to provide for the children’s emotional and physical needs.
Read more about Liu and her family on our website.
The Kambove Care Point is a place of love and care in the midst of desperate vulnerability.
125 of the most vulnerable children in Kambove receive a daily meal, access to education and access to basic health care.
The Care Workers are committed to ensuring that the children receive a daily nutritious meal, access to education and basic health care.
MORE FROM THE DRC
Raising a large family isn’t easy but Mama Safi isn’t alone in caring for Mwete. He has a bigger family of support at the Care Point, with the Care Workers and the other children.
On Saturday evening we heard the news that there was an eruption of the volcano called Mount Nyiragongo, which is situated in Goma. And of course it immediately caused huge panic and people started fleeing into Rwanda immediately, and some people fled to the nearest city outside Goma called Sake.
Tina and her siblings were struggling with their health when they were discovered by the local volunteer Care Workers from the Maisha Community Based Organisation (CBO). Initially, Tina couldn’t play, and rarely smiled. Her hair was falling out, her belly was protruding and her feet were swollen; all symptoms that she was severely malnourished.
Through serving with Hands at Work, I have learned what it means to forgive. A few years ago, I felt the Holy Spirit telling me to forgive my auntie and pray a prayer of forgiveness. I was able to talk with her and release the bitterness and bondage that I had in my heart. Afterwards I felt joy and a new sense of connection with her.
I was surprised, moved and thankful for the things that had changed. New additions to the team. New Care Points serving more children than was previously possible. New dreams and imaginative possibilities for partnership with the international church.
In February 2017, Emerance, a dedicated local volunteer Care Worker, from the Maisha Community Based Organisation (CBO) was passing by the fields and noticed four young children working in the field and Liu laying lifeless in her great-grandmother’s lap; helpless and severally malnourished. Emerance acted out of compassion and urgency and took the children directly to the Care Point, so they could receive a meal that day. She knew that if they did not eat, there was a possibility that they would not survive.
“Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction and faithful in prayer. Share with God’s people who are in need and practice hospitality.” Romans 12:12-13
Several Hands at Work volunteers reflect on how the watchword for 2017 has impacted them:
Care Workers are the key in bringing healing and transformation to the lives of our children. They are men and women from the local churches within our communities who recognize their Biblical mandate and answer their call to care for the most vulnerable children. They demonstrate what it means to give freely, love unconditionally, and sacrifice everything. Often, Care Workers face their own traumas and live in dire poverty, just as the children they care for do, but their determination to persevere and care despite their own circumstances challenges everyone they come into contact with. They are greatest in the Kingdom of God!
Just a few weeks ago, Blessings had the opportunity to return to the DRC and visit Praise again. He shares an update about him and says, “This year Praise turned three. Last year when I met him, he was very sick – at two years old he was not able to stand on his own. I had very little hope that he would make it in life. We surrounded him with prayer and interceded, but I still had little hope, and doubt overwhelmed my heart.
Praise’s grandmother Bertha began caring for him, but she was desperately poor and trying to survive. Praise was hungry - continually crying. People in the community said he would die and tried to put ritual charms around him but Bertha refused and knew God would provide. After her husband passed away many years ago, she said she learned to trust God throughout any hardship.