HIV/AIDS
By 2010, an estimated 15.7 million children in sub-Saharan Africa will have lost at least one parent due to AIDS. Even where HIV prevalence stabilizes or begins to decline, the number of orphans will continue to grow or at least remain high for years, reflecting the time lag between HIV infection and death.
In Kenya, according to UNAIDS, in 2005 there were 1.1 million orphans due to AIDS. This crisis impacts entire communities as they struggle to respond to the needs of these children, who suffer physical, emotional, educational, and sociological impacts.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Kenya ministers to these orphans and to the families and communities mobilizing to provide them with care. We seek to partner with the ELCK to fund and support a project, perhaps a community-based orphanage, over a five year time frame.
Poverty
Nairobi, the capital of Kenya, is a city of 3 million inhabitants. Some 60% are packed into slums, which comprise only 5% of Nairobi's land mass. The biggest and poorest slum in Nairobi, and in fact in all of Africa, is Kibera, with a population of over 1 million. A BBC reports describes it as "600 acres of mud and filth, with a brown stream running through the middle."
The ELCK has a church in Kibera where the living Word is preached and people without hope hear of a Savior.
Just barely scratching the surface, these statistics and descriptions of a humanitarian crisis inform and influence our calling. Because at the end of the day, if don't do something people will die. We can do some-thing, and therefore we go to Kenya to find out what that is.
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