Tanzania World Mission Frontier

Ministry in Tanzania began in 1995 with refugee camp ministry in Kagera Province, Tanzania.
In 1994, missionary Kim Paul (Pyung-Lyuk) covered news from refugee camps in the Kabarisa and Ngara Camp of Kagera Province, Tanzania, and prepared for refugee camp missionary work.
In April 1995, Elder Samuel, who had cooperated with the establishment of an orphanage and kindergarten in Rwanda, and Brother Aloy, who had nowhere to go as refugees, were resettled in Uganda and began ministry in refugee camps in Tanzania.
Elder Samuel and Brother Aloy were enrolled in a seminary in Uganda to study theology, and they visited refugee camps in Tanzania once a month to carry out refugee camp ministry.
In Kabarisa village in Kagera Province, where 150,000 refugees were living in two refugee camps, a seminary was opened in Kabarisa camp 1, teaching 150 students and managing a kindergarten with 3,000 children participating.
In January 1997, the Tanzanian government forcibly returned Rwandan refugees and at the same time moved the refugee camp seminary to Rwanda.
Missionary Kim Paul (Pyung-Lyuk), who had a vision of building a hospital ship in Lake Victoria, Tanzania in 1996, dispatched a Rwandan pastor, Pastor Aporineri, to Tanzania in 2002 to conduct preliminary research for the hospital ship ministry in Lake Victoria.
Also, we began ministries such as Yangjae School and a home for street boys. A mission center was also established in Bukoba.
The Lake Victoria Hospital Ship was completed in 2014, and Line 2 is currently under construction, with completion scheduled for 2024.
Tanzania's World Mission Frontier is an NGO called CLWMF (Christian Life World Mission Frontier) that is working in Tanzania.
Currently, in addition to the Lake Victoria hospital ship, we have mission centers in Bukoba, Muwanza, Isolae, and Saeringeti.