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Marafiki USA Board Members
Founder/CEO - Rev. Dr. John Nganga
Pat Chapman - Secretary
Janeen Baldridge - Assistant Secretary
Molapo Kgabo - Treasurer
Benson Mungai - Assistant Treasurer
John Mueller - Accountant
Joseph Wambbugu - Golf Captain
Denise Shipp
Joan Ochieng
Cleohus Odour
Karleen Kinkler
Paul Denny
Rafiki AIDS Ministry (Kenya) Board Members
Rev. Peter Nyoro Macharia - Chairman
Amos Gitungo Kanja - V/Chairman
Moses Njoroge Muraguru - Treasurer
Ezekiel Kamuyu Kaguatha - Secretary & Project Manager
Benson Mwaura Nganga - Assistant Project Manager
Jane Wanjiru Kaniu
John Kangara
Elizabeth Nduta Kuria
James Mbatia Thande
Jane Wanjiku Kangethe
Mrs Pauline Njeri Kiriko
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Marafiki Global
AIDS Ministry, Inc. was founded by Rev. John
Mungai Nganga, D. Min; BCC; an Anglican priest from
Kenya, Africa. Its primary mission is to assist children
infected or affected by HIV/AIDS in Kenya, Africa. In
1989, while a priest in charge of Thika parish in Kenya,
Rev. Nganga encountered his first AIDS patient. The
patient was a young lady in the final stages of AIDS,
dying alone in an isolated room at a local hospital.
What he saw when he walked into that room devastated
him. He was confronted with the horrific deterioration
of the human body in the final stages of the disease.
That sight touched his heart deeper than anything had
ever touched him before. That experience forever changed
his life. From that moment, Rev. Nganga vowed that, if
given the chance to further his education, he would
study Clinical Pastoral Care so he could enter into
hospital ministry.
In 1991, the opportunity he had
prayed for so long presented itself. Rev. Nganga secured
a position in the United States where he earned a pair
of Master Degrees and a Doctor of Ministry in Pastoral
Supervision from United Theological Seminary in Dayton,
Ohio. In 1994, he was granted the position of Resident
Chaplain at Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. He
was delighted to discover the hospital's HIV/AIDS
Program. It was an answer to his prayers, thus, he
immediately requested to be assigned there.
Soon after beginning work at
Children's Hospital, Columbus, Rev. Nganga founded Marafiki Global
AIDS Ministry, Inc. "Marafiki" is a
Swahili word meaning friend; a friend who is willing to
love you unconditionally, irrespective of your color or
religion, through your ups and downs, to lend a hand, to
be there for you. Everyone needs such a friend, but to
those in crisis it can mean the strength to meet each
day with renewed hope. It is this type of friend that
Reverend Nganga wanted to be to AIDS victims.
Thanks to a 1996 grant from The
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Faith in Action
Program, Children's Hospital Foundation, The Columbus
Foundation, and the Family AIDS Clinic and Educational
Services, Marafiki was able to establish a
volunteer-based program that served Central Ohio
families infected and affected by HIV/AIDS. The
overwhelming success of this program in Central Ohio
prompted Rev. Nganga to begin a similar program in
Kenya, Africa. The site selected was Nganga's birthplace
in Kikuyu, outside the city of Nairobi.
In September 1998, Rev. Nganga
and a team of 11 volunteers made the first Mission trip
to Kenya. The goal was to see, first hand, the effect
AIDS has had on the country and to look for ways in
which the ministry could be implemented there. The team
saw, immediately, the effect the epidemic has had on the
children. In Kikuyu Township, an area roughly the size
of Ohio in the United States, the team gathered the
names of nearly 320 children who had been orphaned by
the deaths of their parents.
In 1999, five volunteers
returned to Kenya determined to create a Children's
Center for AIDS orphans. It would be easy to say,
"Leave it to the government," but such social
services do not exist in Kenya. There are no programs in
place to support AIDS orphans, and the few area
orphanages are filled to capacity. If there is no
extended family or charitable neighbors, AIDS orphans
live and die on the street.
Even for those children lucky
enough to be "adopted" by a caring family,
school usually is not an option because it costs too
much.
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