Kipuke West Africa Ministries
Serving West Africa-Francophone
Dove over Africa

Community Development

Kipuke Ministries has established a Training Center in Pya (Northern Togo) where there is a greet need. The goal of the Training Center is to give to young women and young men a variety of skills in order to help them become self-supporting and contributing members of the society.

The recruitment of the young women and men is done in small villages. The selected people are brought to the Training Center were they are provided with academic education and home economics training including: cooking, sewing, childcare, agriculture, cosmethology and hygiene... for the women. A nursery is made available to the students with small children where they are provided with care and food or the day. The men are taught agriculture, electricity, carpentry, masonry, automobile and motorcycle mechanics.

Due to the large number of children who have lost their parents for various reasons, Kipuke Ministries has initiated an orphan program where selected children are placed in foster families for care. KM provides host families with food, clothes, shoes and especially with medical attention for children.

Literacy is of major concern for Kipuke Ministries. People of all ages from the neighboring villages are welcomed to KM Training Centre to learn how to read and write. 

Kipuke Ministries welcomes missionary teams from arround the world especially from the United States and Europe. Teams are utilized in various ways, depending on their gifts and talents. Medical teams hold clinics where they diagnose and treat all who come. Free medical treatment and medicine are provided to villagers when clinics are conducted. Persons with physical illnesses, psychological problems, disabilities, and geriatric and pediatric needs are addressed. Medical teams provide eye examen and free glasses.

Kipuke Ministries Well Drilling project assures that the villagers have pure drinking water. This project greatly decreases the amount of illness and death caused by villagers drinking polluted water.




Progress