MY TRIP TO VISIT SHALOM ORPHANAGE CENTRE 2020

 As usual, this is how I started my New Year once again. I visited Shalom Orphanage Centre @ Karatu , about 85 children are taken care by Mama Shalom ( Warra Nnko), God bless you Mama. You have the heart of God, listening to the testimony of how they came to the house ! One must cry. I Also bless you Bishop Johnson Lugenge who makes things happen. May the Lord bless this Servants of God. 
Let me remember you that, also these beautiful children got very touchable video songs through the coaching of myself. You can check them through youtube. You’ll enjoy swahili songs but English subtitled. 
 SHALOM ORPHANAGE CENTRE
Shalom Orphanage is a non-profit organization founded by Mama Warra Nnko in 2004, with a mission to improve the lives of orphaned, abandoned and disadvantaged children. 
Currently Shalom orphanage is home to 80 children from 0 to 18 years old. 40 of them are double orphans, having lost both parents. 
Shalom’s heart is to see that all children are shown unconditional love regardless of religion, tribe or ethnicity. Shalom serves to give these kids a childhood back and strives to not only give them the basics such as food and shelter, but to also show them that God has a unique plan for each of their lives. Most of the children come with several medical problems. Many have HIV/AIDS, mental or physical disabilities or have suffered severe trauma. Shalom offers healing and care for these children. More than 1.2 million children in Tanzania have been orphaned due to AIDS and many carry the disease themselves, requiring special care and attention that surviving families often fail to provide.
 THE CHILDREN
There are 85 children happily growing in Shalom. An average of five new children arrive every year into care at Shalom for various reasons. These include physical and sexual abuse at home, parents addicted to drugs and alcohol, death of both parents, and abandonment due to poverty, gender, disability or illness. Some of the children have been rescued from sex trafficking and forced labor. 
Abandonment: Children born to unwed mothers in Tanzania are often subject to brutal abandonment. Some are left by the side of the road, buried in the jungle or tossed away like waste. Unplanned children are the first to fall victim to cruel abandonment and superstitious ritual, such as leaving newborns in the jungle for animals, burying children alive and dumping them at trash sites. 
HIV/AIDS: Remains one of the greatest threats in Tanzania, with over 400 new infections every day. Due largely to the AIDS epidemic, the orphan population in Tanzania is staggering. 
Poverty: It is estimated that more than a third of households live below the basic needs’ poverty line, earning less than $1 a day, being children at higher risk of abandonment.
  Mama Warra Nnko is a woman of faith who believes she can achieve anything with the help of God. This inspiration is what has made her the visionary for this home for children. 
This is how Shalom was born… In 2003, Rev. Nnko and his wife (Mama Warra) from Arusha were visiting a church in Karatu. They spent the night in a local hostel where they had planned to rest and then make the three-hour drive back the next morning. The night was cold and rainy. During the night, Mama Warra heard a faint sound at their door and there laid a newborn baby boy. They rushed him to the nearest hospital and stayed at the child’s side that night. The next morning, they had to leave for Arusha, but Mama Warra gave the doctors money and told them she would come back for the child. For days, she wept over this child and that someone would reject such an innocent and beautiful baby boy. Several days later, she received the heartbreaking news that the child had died. But that night would live in Mama Warra’s memory for the rest of her life. That night added fuel to the fire in her heart to rescue orphans. 
Because of what they had seen in Karatu, Mama Warra and her husband decided to move from the city Arusha to the tiny village of Karatu and begin what is now known as Shalom Orphanage. Mama Warra and her husband faced extremely challenging circumstances when they started this work. They had little room, little help, and no money. At times even, her husband found it difficult to understand his wife’s relentless passion and cautioned her that this mission carried tremendous responsibility and garnered little return. 

Let us join and give a helping hand to them. Raising kids from babysitting up to adolescents it is not an easy job. 
God bless you all 

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