Zambia, Africa

ZAM17 - Patience Child Care


Partnership Ref.:

ZAM17

Partner:

Doris Nkausu

Commenced:

25/11/2007

Funding Status:

Fully Funded

Partnership Type:

Orphans & Vulnerable Children

Funding Size:

$0 - $2,999

Annual Budget:

US$ 484

Zambia


Population: 16.59 million

Life Expectancy: 60.79 years

GDP: US$1248 per capita

Unemployed: 16.0%

81.5% earn less than US$2/day

Current Partnership Impact


60 families are being assisted

20 families are accessing microloans

20 people are in vocational or agricultural training


Partnership Overview

keen to trainOn the border of Zambia and the DRC, near to the city of Ndola, lives a solo mother who has been trained in orphan care and how to set up care programmes. Doris Nkausu had identified 36 vulnerable orphans who live in this border area and who come to her church. The original plan was to send the children to school, give them a meal once a week and run a programme with them, and ensure they are being well cared for.

They also run a Foundations for Farming training programme with the aim that the guardian families will increase their household income to help care for their own children. After training all the orphan's guardians they have extended the trainings to other people in the community including vulnerable youth. Doris' extended family help her with this work.

Sadly Lemon, Doris' father, who was heavily involved in the partnership passed away in 2017 but the family continues to help others in the community.

With the growing number of farming trainings having a great impact on the guardian families, by 2021 there was no longer the need to add orphans to the school funding programme, instead they continue to run farming trainings and have started a micro-loan project to boost families who already have a small business. They also have started a ladies discipleship group to encourage them through a book called "Knowing and Doing".

History Of Partnership

Leadership teamDoris Nkausu attended Teen Mission Training in 2004. On graduation she wanted to go to a rural area to care for children but could not raise the required funds to do so. She therefore returned to her father's house in Kaniki, Ndola. She became aware that in the community around her home there were many vulnerable children and she had compassion for them. Doris began helping a family that were destitute. 

After talking to the Bright Hope World Africa Director she realised she should look a little closer to home in terms of identifying vulnerable children to care for.  She started by assisting these children herself, getting them together on Saturdays and helping them grow a little garden. The plan was for them to gather each week for a programme at her home and to assist them to go to school.

In 2010 Doris and her father Lemon attended a Foundations for Farming training course at Maplehurst farm. Since then, they have been learning and using the techniques in both their own and the orphan's field. Since 2012 they have been running training courses for guardians of the orphans and provided them with small plots on Lemon's farm for them to start using the techniques. There have been great results lifting yields by up to 500%, thereby helping families to increase their household income and enabling them to fund the orphans into school.

Beneficiaries

Many ladies, and families, are being impacted through the farming training, business loans and discipleship programmes.

What We Like About the Partnership

Doris is a very active lady in her community. She sees people's needs and has the ability to think about how they can best be helped. She loves to write proposals that aim to empower people and shows her massive heart for the community.

 

Key People

Leadership Profile

Loves kidsDoris Nkausu attends the Baptist church at Kaniki and is a Sunday school teacher and choir member. She lives with her mother, sisters, and nieces. She has a son named Chisenga whose father died when he was just five months old.

Chisenga’s father died before he and Doris were able to get married. Doris passed through a very hard time having a small baby to look after and no income. It became increasingly difficult for Doris when Chisenga started to go to school. She said that she cried a lot because she couldn’t manage financially. At that stage in her life, she didn’t know God very well.

Doris attended Teen Missions for three years. This gave her sound Bible training and a lot of practical experience working with children and farming.

"I like God a lot, I love to sing. I am a business lady and have had small businesses in the past. In my life I would just like to be a mother to children who have no mother. I want to have a house and keep them. This passion started with my son. I saw how he felt not having a father. Then at Teen Mission I saw how children were even worse off with no parents. They were so poor, and I felt compassion, I wanted to help them. God put this burden on my heart. When I think of my son with no father, I feel bad. It is hard to lose parents."

Doris parentsChisenga has now completed a mechanics engineering course after attending the GLO Bible college GAP Year (ZAM19c). He will complete a degree in theology in 2023 from the Teka college, and is getting married in December 2023.


Other People Involved 

Grace Nkausu (Doris' mother)

 

Vision and Annual Strategy

The vision is to care for the vulnerable in the Kaniki community through farming training, business loans, and the discipleship programmes. 


Personal Testimony

lovely girlsNatasha, Honesty and Mary

These three girls came to talk with us about the orphans' program and their lives. They are in Grade 10 and 11. They all speak great English and are well spoken young women. They all say they are so thankful for Patience Orphan Programme otherwise there would be no education in their lives.

They attend school in town which means they have to travel each day by bus which costs 15 ZMK each day (US$1.50). They all live near Lemon's house and visit Lemon and Doris regularly. In fact, Mary is the daughter of Joseph Kungwa who was in the very first intake of students at GLO Zambia when BHW's Field Director was the principal.

They find life can be a bit boring where they live with little in the way of recreation activities. They are able to play some football and netball at GLO. 

All of them are saying they would like to become nurses when they finish school as that way they can help people.

grateful for trainingMr Kafwala

Mr Kafwala was trained in 2012 in the Foundations for Farming methods. He has a daughter who is on the orphans' programme called Hidah. 

Hidah was disabled from birth and struggles with learning, but they are looking after her. She is currently 9 years old and in Grade 3. She has two sisters that live with her and her mum and dad. 

They rent a property on the Nkausu's farm and he has planted 1.5 limas of maize this year. It is looking good, but they need the rain to develop the kernels on the cobs. He planted on the 15th December and used D compound and urea fertilizers.