Partnership Ref.: |
ZAM23 |
Partner: |
Noman Tonga |
Commenced: |
12/12/2007 |
Funding Status: |
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Partnership Type: |
Orphans & Vulnerable Children, Training / Education |
Funding Size: |
$0 - $2,999 |
Annual Budget: |
US$ 2,365 |
Connected To: |
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Video: |
No video available yet |
Funding Contact: |
No funding required |
Population: 16.59 million
Life Expectancy: 60.79 yearsGDP: US$1248 per capita
Unemployed: 16.0%
81.5% earn less than US$2/day
200 families are being assisted
23 children are being supported into schooling
200 families are accessing microloans
50 people are learning to read and write in literacy classes
12 people employed in partner businesses
The rural areas around Chipata are very poor and have increasing issues each year as the climate seems to be getting drier and drier. The HIV/AIDS pandemic there has also created a number of orphaned children in the area. Churches have seen these issues and want to make a difference by teaching new farming techniques (through Foundations for Farming) and also by providing help for orphan’s education (school fees, uniforms and other requirements). Partnering with them creates opportunities to directly help the most vulnerable and facilitate change amongst some of the poorest of the poor.
A soyabean programme has been established that helps farmers to provide inputs, training and a market through Share Africa Zambia. A maize microloan programme also helps famers with inputs and training.
There are also still many new churches being planted in the area, as the current churches keep evangelising and leading many people to Christ. Suppling bibles has greatly helped this evangelism.
Lonard and Rosemary Daka, along with Norman Tonga, have been church planting in this area for more than 20 years. As the first church they planted at Mchacha developed it was swamped by vulnerable children and their guardians. They therefore started Chifundo Orphan Care (ZAM07b), to assist the children to go to school and help them in other ways.
In 2004, Greerton Bible Church in Tauranga, New Zealand, and an individual family in their congregation began a partnership with Chifundo. This involved personal support for Lonard and Rosemary as the key people and the support of children into school. It also involved the purchase of a motorbike to enable Lonard and Rosemary to move around the district to help the newly formed churches grow, to train them and encourage them. This project in Chipata is the direct result of that investment.
There are now more than 30 healthy churches in this part of the Eastern Province of Zambia. Almost every family in this area has had at least one orphan join their family. In 2007 BHW was asked to help with the establishment of this new partnership as a group of churches wanted to start caring for their orphans too.
Lonard and Norman attended the Foundations for Farming courses at Maplehurst Farm in 2009. Since then, they have been training many people in the churches, some by scheduled courses and others simply by talking and mentoring them. There have been increases in yields up to 500% in maize crops with those who have been following the methods well.
With sadness, Lonard passed away on 19th January 2015 after a one-year battle with a stomach illness. Norman Tonga now carries on the baton for this partnership. Norman shows his commitment to church planting by bicycling up to 80km in a day with his wife on the back to visit a newly planted church.
The beneficiaries are the orphans and vulnerable children and their guardian families who are assisted with school fees and requirements. Many families have been trained in Foundations for Farming and receive inputs as loans with follow up to ensure they are following the techniques well.
There are a number of very positive aspects to this partnership:
1) There is good cooperation between the churches and each church is committed to making the partnership work
2) Good processes and structures have been established for registering, monitoring and identifying the issues and the most vulnerable people
3) There is good leadership and clear identification and development of emerging leaders
4) The children are being monitored well and visited regularly
5) The leaders are committed to farming and teaching people in the community
Norman Tonga is the leader of the partnership in the villages. He attended GLO Bible College in the early 1990's and then returned to this area to start working with the local churches. Norman is a good farmer, growing cotton and maize for sale, plus he has a bullock and cart as a transport business. He has a heart for Muslim people and has been encouraged to see how the Gospel through Foundations for Farming has helped to convert people to Jesus.
Moven Tonga: Normans brother and his wife who are helping with the day to day running of the patnership
Vision And Annual Strategy- To become a self sustained partnership through farming enterprises such as soyabeans.
- To continue to plant churches and look after vulnerable children.
- To train farmers to enable the family unit to be sustained through their own hard work.