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The
Marafiki Global AIDS Ministry's Mission is to provide food,
shelter, medical care, education, a safe Christian
living environment, and loving support to children
worldwide who have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS.
Marafiki began in Central Ohio
in 1995 as a faith-based volunteer workforce trained by
medical and pastoral care professionals to provide
HIV/AIDS families with spiritual support and life-care
assistance.
In 1998, Marafiki founder Rev.
John Nganga and a team of 11 volunteers traveled to
Kenya to see the effect AIDS has had on the country and
to look for way in which Marafiki could help there. The
team saw immediately that AIDS orphans needed their help
most desperately. In Kikuyu Township, one small area
roughly the size of the state of Ohio in the United
States, the team gathered the names of 320 children who
had been orphaned by the deaths of their parents.
The social services and support
networks we are accustomed to in the United States and
Europe do not exist in Kenya. There are no programs to
support these most desperate of children, and the very
few area orphanages are filled to capacity. The
children's only options are to be taken in by remaining
family members, live with charitable neighbors, or when
neither of these is available, live on the
streets.
Since school is not free in
Kenya, even those children lucky enough to find a second
family to take them in, may not be able to go to school
and must, instead, find work to pay for their upkeep.
Through its programs, Marafiki
is working to provide a home for the homeless and
support for the orphans taken in by generous relatives
or neighbors.
You can help -
click here.
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History of Marafiki
Marafiki
means "friends" in Swahili

ENLARGING
THE MARAFIKI
CHILDREN’S CENTER ORPHANAGE
ALL
CONTRIBUTIONS TO
MARAFIKI
GLOBAL AIDS MINISTRY, INC. ARE TAX
DEDUCTIBLE. |