In Their Own Words

  • DSC_4114
  • DSC_0359
  • DSC_0451
  • DSC_0829
  • DSC_0934
  • DSC_1027
  • DSC_1615
  • DSC_1691
  • DSC_2216
  • DSC_2810
  • DSC_2843
  • DSC_3056
  • DSC_3089
  • DSC_3202
  • DSC_3652
  • DSC_3783
  • DSC_3997
Click the images above to launch the slide show

Photo Gallery

photos by Joann Bradberry

Posted August 18, 2010

A glimpse into the lives of the Bambara, a people group of 4 million.

With her reddish-tinged hair and frail frame, this 5-year-old girl shows signs of malnutrition, which accounts for more than 50 percent of Mali’s infant mortality. The United Nations reports about one-third of Malian children are malnourished.

A young boy plays in the streets of Bamako, the capital city of Mali.

Tailors work at a shop in Bamako, Mali.

An elder sits with his village’s grain during a grain distribution in Mali. 120 villages received 500 tons of millet through a grant from Baptist Global Response.

The robes of a village chief in Mali.

Southern Baptist volunteers work with nationals to distribute grain in a village in Mali, West Africa. 120 villages received 500 tons of millet through a grant from Baptist Global Response.

A volunteer from the United States leads a moonlight worship service with Bambara believers in a village in Mali.

A Malian man helps give out sacks of grain during a food distribution project. 120 Bambara villages received 500 tons of millet through a grant from Baptist Global Response.

A Bambara woman sings hymns during a moonlight worship service in Mali.

A child plays in a Bambara village in Mali.

A Bambara man converses while sitting on a sack of grain in a Mali village.

A child plays with a discarded tire in a Bambara village in Mali.

A Bambara woman in a village in Mali.

Bambara children play in a village in Mali.

Children play together in a village in Mali.

A Bambara woman prepares “toh,” a traditional food made of millet, in a village in Mali.

Bambara children in a village in Mali.

     

Tell Others!

AfricaStories Resources

AfricaStories T-shirts are now available for only $7! You can also order free stickers, magnets, and print copies of our tabloid magazine.

Visit imbresources.org/africa

Web Site Poll

Loading ... Loading ...

Follow Us Online!