Peacemaker has helped educate thousands in southern Africa

 

Mabuchi N. Dokowe is one of 14 International Peacemakers coming to the U.S. this fall

September 27, 2019

Mabuchi N. Dokowe

Mabuchi N. Dokowe has 6,204 children.

Four of them are her own she is raising with her husband in Lusaka, the capital and largest city in Zambia. The other 6,200 are students in 32 community schools in the southern African nation that she oversees at the director of community schools for vulnerable and marginalized children for the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian (CCAP), Synod of Zambia.

“We formed community schools to capture vulnerable and marginalized children who cannot afford to get into government or private schools,” Dokowe writes.

It is a job with significant challenges, including “poverty, high level of unemployment, HIV and AIDS, poor sanitation and no proper health facilities,” Dokowe writes. At some schools they have dug boreholes to access clean water. Some have community health centers to help their underserved communities.

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) has helped the schools’ efforts through financial, transportation and human resources, Dokowe says. This September and October, she is traveling to the United States as one of the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program’s 14 International Peacemakers.

Peacemakers are available to visit around the country until Oct. 7. Visits are coordinated with mid councils (synods and presbyteries) and can include appearances in churches, seminaries, colleges, universities and similar institutions. Visits generally last three to five days, but they can be extended as needed.

Dokowe planned to teach and learn. She has hoped to gain insight from her fellow peacemakers and from people she meets across the country. But given the scope and depth of the work she has to do in Zambia, there’s a lot that Americans and fellow Peacemakers can learn from Dokowe.

Like any teacher, Dokowe’s success can be seen in where former students of the schools she helps lead are now.

Answering questions submitted to her by the Peacemaking Program, she writes that the schools she works with have a “98% pass rate during the national assessment examinations. … Some of these children are attending colleges and university.

“This is an encouragement to the community resulting in more enrollment to our schools.”

Rich Copley, Communications Strategist, Presbyterian Mission Agency

Today’s Focus:  Mabuchi N. Dokowe, International Peacemaker from Zambia

Let us join in prayer for: 

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Catherine Gordon, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Denise Govindarajan, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)

Let us pray:

O God, open us to seeking a peace that is deeper than fear and to holding our neighbors in the light of peace. Amen.


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