Kinship United serves areas where disease, extreme poverty, armed conflict, and society’s structural breakdown cause families to decay. For millions of displaced, refugee, and scattered families, there is often a moment they realize they need to separate themselves from each other so they may survive. In humanitarian aid organizations there is a name for children […]
Abandoned Children Like MuMu Need Your Help this Christmas Season
This year has been challenging for everyone. Covid-19, and its effects on schools, businesses, and families have reached into nearly every home across the globe. But the virus presents unique challenges for developing countries and our Kinship Projects. Fear is around every corner, it seems. But we can take comfort in remembering that Jesus came […]
Community Medicine in a Pandemic
COVID-19 has shaken the world in 2020. It’s hard to imagine the stress a rampant virus places on a community already severely lacking in resources. This new devastating challenge amplified their struggles, beyond the usual turmoil. But the hope you inspire through your generosity is helping “the least of these” survive a virus that wreaks […]
Needs Spotlight: Hurricane Isaias Damages Church, Roof in Dominican Republic
Hurricane Isaias was only a Category 1 storm, but still caused some roof damage to the Cayacoa Kinship Project. They need a new roof, which will cost $3,500. It also destroyed a small church planted by the Kinship in a nearby batey. The pastor there has been serving the desperately poor members of their congregation […]
Redeeming the Time: E-Learning, Kinship-Style
When schools shut down across the world in March, Kinship Kids were sent home without any resources or plans to continue learning. While children in America hung on for a couple of months and made it to summer break, the school year in Africa had just begun in February. They were losing precious time. The […]
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