Dairy Goats Improve Nutrition for Families
Sister Guylaine’s goats bleat loudly as she walks among them pointing out how many there are now. They started with 25 goats last year, a gift from Samaritan’s Purse, and now there are ten more.
She is one of the sisters who serve the community through Little Sisters of Evangelisation church in Babonde, a community in northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Sister Guylaine also runs the Talita Kumi Nutritional Centre, which gets its name from the words of Jesus—the Aramaic phrase he spoke to the girl in Mark 5.
“Little girl. Arise.”
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Surrounding villages and churches from many miles around send malnourished children to Talita Kumi for nutritional therapy. Many of the parents come, too. Years without variety in their diets leaves their bodies sick and underdeveloped.
Now they are learning how to raise livestock through our Faith and Goats programme. They are learning how to feed and care for the goats. They are milking them to add the protein-rich ingredient to their diets.
“As soon as we receive this milk, the children are happy and even the adults appreciate it,” Sister Guylaine says. She hopes that the 35 goats they have produce enough offspring so that many other communities throughout Babonde will be able to have goats as well.
Samaritan’s Purse has also partnered with Talita Kumi in recent years to increase the centre's crop varieties and yields. “We had food difficulties, that’s what I can say,” Sister Guylaine said. “The children were fed manioc, beans, cassava leaves, and bananas, but since Samaritan’s Purse came, we’ve got sweet potatoes, we’ve got vegetable gardening.”
Since they started cultivating the ground with the seeds, tools, and growing techniques provided by Samaritan’s Purse, the families have added bitter eggplants, amaranths, cabbages, sweet eggplants, and carrots to their diets. During their time at Talita Kumi, the families themselves learn how to cultivate these varieties while also eating from them as part of their new, enriched diets.
“Our whole province has a nutrition problem,” she said. “Samaritan’s Purse has intervened and because of them we have grown from strength to strength—because Samaritan’s Purse sees the poor with the eye of the Good Samaritan. May God help us to care for what we have received. We thank the Samaritan’s Purse team for thinking of us.”
MADELINE LIVES in an impoverished village in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. She struggled to provide for her children until she received goats from Samaritan’s Purse and training on how to care for them. These animals have now become a tangible source of blessing, as her original three goats have multiplied and have increased the family’s income. They provide a steady source of protein-rich milk, and the growing herd provides a saleable resource at the local market. “We thank God the Father. Now we are able to educate our children, eat, and take care of our health needs,” Madeline said. Your £55 gift will provide a goat or other dairy animal for a struggling family like Madeline’s and remind them that “every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights” (James 1:17).