Orphan Ministry

Mohau Ministry

Mohau Ministry

by Toni Braddix

Posted on September 16, 2010

Jacky Makela and Ella Jansen van Vuuren support The Pastor in Tsietsi township — not an unusual thing for South African Christians to do, but in this instance The Pastor is a 4-year-old child.

Tsepo is one of 49 orphaned children who receive love and provision of their physical needs through Mohau (Mercy), Jacky and Ella’s ministry.

Nicknamed The Pastor by the other children because he is an encourager and peacekeeper, Tsepo and five orphaned cousins were left in the care of a grandmother with limited means to provide for them. Ella found Tsepo wandering the streets of Tsietsi, an impoverished squatter camp in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Knowing there are thousands more like him — children who must fend for themselves, hungry, uneducated, forced into a life of crime or prostitution simply to survive — Ella and Jacky took action. They started Mohau to offer safety, security and an opportunity for children orphaned by AIDS-related illnesses to stay with their siblings rather than being sent to separate institutions.

In a shack near Tsepo’s home, the women established a day care for preschool children, a secure environment where the little ones can prepare to enter school and receive two nourishing meals daily. South Africa has no free education, so by finding sponsors to provide money for school fees, clothes and supplies, Jacky and Ella enable older children to get an education. “If they don’t go to school, they will be criminals,” states Ella bluntly.

Through Mohau’s programs, grandparents are relieved of the pressure of providing emotional and physical support for the children left in their care, and the children are able to stay together and have some semblance of family life. The community supports the women’s efforts because the children are off the streets and on their way to becoming productive members of society.

Ella shares, “If I didn’t have God and if this wasn’t truly a calling from God, I would never have been able to deal with the circumstances.” Admonitions in the book of James to care for orphans, widows and the poor keep them going when resources are strained and energy wanes. When the children ask where their parents are – which happens frequently – the women comfort them with the knowledge they have a loving heavenly Father who will never leave them.

When asked about their ministry’s greatest need, Ella’s first response is “prayer.” Jacky requests prayers that they will be “strong and faithful and have the heart to keep on.”

Almost daily Jacky visits another child she and Ella would like to add to their program, but they lack the resources to help them all. If you would like to help with Mohau, express your interest on the form, and AfricaStories will pass on your information to Ella and Jacky.

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