Published: Friday 14 January 2011
Barnabas helps Christian girls escape abuse in Kenya
Project(s): 25-663
Country: Kenya, Middle East and North Africa
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Christian girls in a dormitory at the rescue centre.
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Barnabas Aid supports a Girls’ Rescue Centre based in a remote rural region of Kenya where the people are very poor. Christian girls and women in the area are under great pressure from traditional religious beliefs and practices. Many are ill-treated in this patriarchal society, where common practices include polygamy, female genital mutilation (female circumcision) and forced marriage at a very young age – often to men decades older than themselves.
The Girls’ Rescue Centre is run by a Christian minister and his wife. For years they cared for girls and women in their own home but with demand continually exceeding the capacity, they built a small hostel/refuge in 2006. Barnabas Aid helped to equip the new centre and assisted with running costs for the 20 girls. In 2007-2008 Barnabas Aid financed the construction of a new, larger building, significantly increasing the capacity of the rescue centre to around 50, and we continue to assist with running costs.
It is a place of refuge for young Christian women escaping abusive situations. These include orphans, young girls being virtually "sold" to much older, polygamous men, as well as those suffering various kinds of abuse, violence and other forms of ill-treatment. In some situations their mothers have become Christians and want to protect their daughters from abuse. In yet other cases the girls themselves are converts to Christianity who are persecuted for their faith.
It’s the only home of its kind in the district and has attracted newspaper coverage in Kenya. In an article in a Kenyan daily newspaper, the minister who runs the rescue centre said:
Most of them fear their parents, especially fathers, who insist on early marriages to increase their livestock*.
Every time a rescued girl is brought to my home, I take her as my own daughter, knowing that soon (their people) will have powerful women in the government and internationally.
(*families receive a dowry, which is usually cattle, when the daughter is married. This is one of the reasons for parents making their daughters marry very young.)
The centre has four dormitories of 12 beds, a kitchen, storeroom, large dining room/lounge, matron’s flat and other facilities. It also has an electricity connection and its own garden.
The cost per girl is just £6.50 (US$10, €7.50, AU$10.50, NZ$13.50) a week. This covers food, fuel, clothes, utility costs, school fees, books and materials, and the salaries of the matron and watchman. The girls also contribute by working on the large vegetable plot, where they grow a significant proportion of their own food. The centre receives some other donations, including local food deliveries.
A report from the rescue centre, received in September 2010, said that the girls were doing well and were back at their respective schools for the third term of the year. Over the holidays, they took part in church activities and attended youth rallies for spiritual encouragement. They also attended a church conference for a week, where they learnt a great deal, including the value of a good education to enable them to change their lives positively.
Give Today
To contribute towards the Girls Rescue Centre please donate to:
25-663 Kenya – Girls Rescue Home
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