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Home > Mission Work > Long-Term Project > 2005-2010 Project

 Pygmy Missions (Rwanda, D.R.Congo, Burundi)
The pygmies of central Afirca (Rwanda, Burundi, D.R.Congo) are in danger of extinction. With clay pot making as their only work, the Pygmies who are in dire poverty and lacking even in clothing have no opportunity for education. Pygmies, who live in isolated villages deep in the mountains, are an unevangelized ethnic minority group alienated from Africans. ¡°World Mission Frontier¡± established mission Pygmy mission centers in Rwanda and D.R.Congo and continue to search out and spread the Gospel to Pygmy villages that are unknown to the world.
  Work Being Promoted
1. Locate the whereabouts of Pygmy villages unknown to the international community. 2. Open the door to missions by doing relief work though the provision of food and clothing.
3. Send missionaries to provide regular, periodic bible studies for the purpose of evangelization.
4. Modernize the primary Pygmy industry of clay pot making and provide farming techniques and dairy-farming techniques to increase the living standards of the villages.
  Participating in the Mission
1. Long-term and short term mission work consisting of bible studies, vocational education, or provision of medical care.
2. Adopt a Pygmy family and provide support ($20 monthly).
3. Take charge of a Pygmy village consisting of 100 to 200 people and provide support (for organizations).


 Construction of Mission Support Centers (Guest Houses)
¡°World Mission Frontier¡± plans to build Guest Houses (used as mission centers) in Uganda (Kampala), Rwanda (Kigali), Burundi (Muzumbura), Tanzania (Arusha, Mwanza, Bukova), and D.R.Congo (Bukavu) by the year 2010. The facilities will be used for the purpose of developing indigenous leaders and and as operational headquarters for short-term mission teams. The Guest Houses attached to the mission centers become sources of revenue for the mission work as well.


 Victoria Lake Medical Clinic Vessel
Victoria Lake which is the second largest lake in the world is home to some 300 large and small islands. The daily life of the islanders is horrific. The sexual corruption is everywhere. Some islands have 80% of their population suffering from AIDS. Many children born of prostitutes and fishermen are neglected. The Victoria Lake Medical Clinic Vessel will visit the islands at regular intervals to provide medical treatment and promote an awareness campaign.
  Work Being Promoted
1. Construct church buildings in each of the islands (at present construction is being done in Makobr and Kome islands), and use the building for worship, education, and as a place to provide medical care;
2. Providing medical care and spreading the gospel by having the medical clinic vessel visit the islands at regular intervals;
3. Building a hospital in Mwanza, Tanzania from where the medical vessel will dock.
  Participating in the Missions
1. Visiting the islands of Victoria Lake and taking part in the medical and educational missions for short and long-term periods;
2. Material support for church construction on the islands ($5000 to $10,000);
3. Offering for the production of the medical clinic vessel (estimated cost of vessel is $50,000);
4. Participate by providing medical equipment and medicines.


 Construction of Medical Clinics
In Rwanda (the starting point of World Mission Frontier¡¯s missions) education, refugee relief, pygmy mission, scholarship work, and independent factory work continue. With the request of the Rwandan government we are expanding into medical mission from 2005 by building clinics in 3 regions. We have acquired three buildings and are awaiting medical equipment and professionals.
  Participating in the Missions
1. Participate short or long-term in medical mission teams;
2. Provide medical equipment and medicines for each of the clinics;
3. Participate by providing monetary support for the operation of the clinics.


 Uganda Technical College, Seminary
Construction of 1 chapel, 8 classrooms, and 5 seminar rooms has been completed at the Uganda Mission Center, and currently an elementary and junior high school are being operated. Construction of 8 lecture halls and 1 small auditorium is in progress at the moment, and in 2006 a seminary will be opened. By 2010 we plan to construct a technical college and open an IT technical college. (In order to obtain teaching personnel we are currently arranging for African natives to attend Korean universities).
  Participating in the Missions
1. Participation: teach primary school, seminary lectures, technical education, medical care provider, and relief work;
2. Donate scholarshipshigh school students ($300 per year), seminary students ($600 per year);
3. Monetary support for the construction of seminary and technical college (individual and organizational donations).


 Rwanda Seminary and Nursing College
At the Rwanda Mission Center, construction of 1 chapel and 3 lecture halls has been completed, and the construction of laboratories and dormitory are in progress. The first graduating class of the Rwanda Seminary has been dispatched to North Africa, and the training of the second class is in progress. A seminary offering an undergraduate BA course is planned for opening by 2006 and in 2007 a nursing college will be opened as well.
Of import is the building of the uniform manufacturing factory within the seminary. Many Rwandan children give up on their education because of the burden of the cost of uniforms which is higher than the tuition. The uniform factory manufacture uniforms and distributes them to poor children for free to allow them to continue their education.
  Participating in the Missions
1. Short and long-term work education work consisting of seminary and nursing college lecturing and computer education;
2. Factory and farming lectures and management of the work field;
3. Monetary support for the Rwandan students of the seminary ($600 per year).


 Loving Hands
World Mission Frontier¡¯s Loving Hands team (headquartered in the LA area) obtain clothing, medicine, medical equipment, books, school supplies, and goats, and transports them to Africa at regular intervals.


 Media and Publication Mission Work
(1) Radio broadcasts are an effective to in spreading the gospel to regions of internal conflict where missionaries cannot be sent. World Mission Frontier is pursuing broadcasting in D.R.Congo.
(2) Publication work is being pursued in the English speaking countries such as Uganda and Tanzania. The Association of Korean Christian Publishing¡¯s (lead by elder Hyung Gyu Lee who is the president) donations of technical instruction and printing machines are helping to build publishing in Africa. .

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