My Name is
Eunice
Eunice
Day students are children in need from the communities surrounding the Rafiki Villages who attend our Rafiki Schools with full scholarships or subsidies. They receive an excellent classical Christian education, daily Bible study, two nutritious meals per day, and basic school supplies. For a child in Africa, attending school means more than ABCs or 123s; it means a hope for a future – spiritually and materially. Your support makes that hope possible for these day students, their families, and their communities. We have given each day student an alias for the privacy and protection of the child and his/her family. If you sponsor a day student, you will receive some additional information about the child and will communicate with the child using the assigned alias.
DOB: Nov 3, 2006
Hebron
Abigail
Day students are children in need from the communities surrounding the Rafiki Villages who attend our Rafiki Schools with full scholarships or...
Ruth
Ruth was placed in the care of her elderly grandparents after her own parents died.
Enoch
Enoch’s mother worked at Rafiki. Her last request before her death was her hope that Enoch could come to live at Rafiki Village Nigeria.
Sharon
Sharon was found abandoned as a small child.
Rachel
Rachel was orphaned when she was just three months old and was then taken in by her grandparents.
Uwase
Uwase’s parents died of an unknown sickness.
Barakael
Barakael's mother died when he was one year old, and his father is unknown.
Leul
After Leul's father died and his mother abandoned him, he was placed in the care of a widow.
Elizabeth
Hana
Hana’s mother died in 2008, and her father remains unknown.
Akosua
Akosua and her twin brother Kwasi arrived at the Rafiki Village Ghana in 2009.
Faith
Faith’s mother passed away as a result of severe pneumonia.
Joseph
Joseph is a double orphan; his mother and father died in 2007.
Felix
Day students are children in need from the communities surrounding the Rafiki Villages who attend our Rafiki Schools with full scholarships or...
Akua
In 2007, Akua’s mother and father both died of illness a few months apart.
Catherine
Catherine’s mother died in 2005, and her father committed suicide in 2008.
Naitoti
Naitoti, her sister, Nasha, and their cousin, Furaha, were cared for by their elderly grandmother after the death of their fathers.
Biruk
Biruk was eighteen months old when his mother died. He then moved in with his aunt.
John
John’s father had been deceased for a few years when his mother died in 2007.
Hannah
Hannah arrived at the Rafiki Village Ghana in April 2010.
Jessica
Jessica was found abandoned as an infant at a community school on September 14, 2009 and was taken to the police station.
Susanna
Susanna’s mother died within a month of giving birth to her. Her father abandoned her and was then reported to have died.
Aaron
Aaron was abandoned as a small child near a police station.