
Impacting 3,230 Children with Hope This Easter

5-day residential Children’s Accelerated Trauma Technique (CATT) Level 2 Training in Arua City for 23 community-based counsellors and frontline child protection actors drawn from Imvepi Refugee Settlement, Rhino Camp Refugee Settlement, and Kerwa Sub-county in Yumbe District.
In April 2026, we had the privilege of conducting the CSCG Discipleship Training across Rhino Camp, Imvepi, and Mijale—bringing together church leaders, community disciples-makers, and savings group leaders with one shared purpose: to build stronger, faith-driven communities in refugee settlements.
Over the course of multiple sessions, 181 leaders—including pastors, CSCGs chairpersons, CSCGs secretaries, CPFs, and lay readers—were equipped with practical, biblically grounded skills to strengthen both their spiritual leadership and community impact.
This wasn’t just a training. It was a movement of transformation.
We focused on real-life applications of core values that communities need most:
Biblical leadership that inspires action
Stewardship that promotes accountability
Integrity that builds trust
Generosity and compassion that restore dignity
Hope that sustains communities even in hardship
The role of the church in community building
By integrating discipleship with livelihood (CSCG savings groups), we are seeing a powerful model emerge—where spiritual growth and economic resilience go hand in hand.
From Rhino Camp to Imvepi to Mijale, the energy was undeniable.
Participants didn’t just listen—they engaged, reflected, and committed to taking these lessons back to their groups and churches.
One participant shared:
“This training has not only changed my life, but I will use the skills and knowledge acquired to change my community too.”
Another added:
“We have been challenged to go and share what we learned in our groups—this will strengthen our Bible study and our saving culture.”
Key Outcomes:
Increased capacity in leadership, stewardship, and community engagement
Strengthened role of the church in refugee community development
Renewed commitment to integrity, generosity, and hope
Empowered leaders ready to disciple others
Of course, we also listened and learned. Participants called for longer training periods, language inclusivity, and continued support—valuable insights that will shape our next phase.
In humanitarian settings, the church remains a powerful pillar of hope. By investing in leaders, we are investing in resilient families, stronger savings groups, and transformed communities.
This is how change happens—one leader, one group, one community at a time.
We are deeply grateful to our dedicated facilitators and every participant who made this journey meaningful. The work continues.



