Uganda

 

Feed The Hungry
(East Africa)

Pastor Solomon Mwesige

 

Irene Gleeson Foundation

John Paul Kiffasi
(Director)

Pastor Alfred Komagum
(IGF Alumni)

Feed the Hungry Partners with Feed The Hungry East Africa, the Irene Gleeson Foundation, Good News Evangelical Alliance, and the Congolese & South Sudanese Refugees

Pastor Solomon learned of Feed the Hungry through Pastor Tom Rouse at the Sumrall School of Ministry in Ironwood, Michigan. Since then, this partnership has connected communities and the government and opened doors for ministry, actively demonstrating God’s love.

One of the programs Pastor Solomon oversees is the Violet Scholarships. These scholarships came about after a few Feed the Hungry donors sponsored a Congo refugee named Violet. The need for funding for students to continue proper education was prevalent. With these scholarships, kids can excel in school and fulfil their potential despite their circumstances.

Another program is Your Story Must Change. This online marketplace, through Feed My Starving Children, allows people to create different things to sell and earn money for their families. The men and women in this program have created bookmarks, backpacks, jewellery, and much more to help earn money for their families.

Pastor Solomon’s long-term goal is to offer more discipleship among the children and train pastors and church leaders to continue sharing Christ’s love in Uganda.

During COVID-19, Pastor Solomon and his team worked hard to continue reaching more people with food and show them the love of Christ. With new access to television, Pastor Solomon has been able to broadcast sermons and church services to many people who otherwise would not learn of Christ.

One of the major challenges Pastor Solomon and Feed the Hungry East Africa face is money. There is always more that can be done but financial restrictions prevent growth.

If he had had the privilege to meet Dr. Lester Sumrall, Pastor Solomon would share his many stories of kids they have fed, and the thousands of people have been impacted by his obedience to God. He would share with him how his work is being continued and seeds are being planted in each child they feed.

If food and God’s word were plentiful, they could reach 200,000 children. With those numbers, the ministry could continue for years with children growing up and stepping into ministry roles.

John Paul learned about Feed the Hungry in 2015 through Benjamin Evans at FTH Australia. Later, he was visited by Pete Sumrall, Stefan Radelich, and Daniel Skokan and the partnership grew from there.

 

The Irene Gleeson Foundation runs four primary schools that have over 4,400 students. This school provides medical support through on-site health clinics, Bible teaching, school uniforms, safe drinking water, counselling as well as breakfast and lunch to all students. They also provide additional nutrition to malnourished children.

The number of children being fed has increased since the partnership with Feed the Hungry began. School attendance and academic performance has also improved in every school level in the past five years. The school has also seen only a 5% dropout rate of girls compared to the district’s 45% dropout rate.

Local farmers are also supported by IGF through purchasing their firewood and excess food. This has increased household income, alleviated poverty, allowed the community to recover, and contributed to the local economy.

John Paul’s long-term goals are to strengthen financial sustainability, increase locally generated revenue, expand local churches and train leaders.

He also wants to enhance his leadership team to effectively teach more people and create more opportunities for the Irene Gleeson Foundation to serve the community through outreach, Christian schooling, healthcare, and recreational sports.
One of the most impactful moments in John Paul’s ministry is the children’s conference in November 2019 and how it impacted the children that attended.

Lately, John Paul has seen a decline in child sponsorship in the past few years. Donations from outside organizations have also decreased, resulting in a huge drop in operations funding. Staff face many financial, emotional, and mental burdens that impact their work concentration, performance, and morale.

If food and God’s word were plentiful, they could reach over 25,000 children in Northern Uganda alone.

 

About Uganda

Floods, droughts, earthquakes, landslides, hailstorms, & water pollution threaten Uganda’s people. Even now only 22.1% of the total population has access to electricity (2023).

Human trafficking is another major issue; Ugandans are subjected to forced labour in agriculture, fishing, forestry, cattle herding, mining, stone quarries, brick making, carpentry, steel manufacturing, restaurants, gold mining, domestic service, sex work, & brothels.

Uganda hosts the highest number of refugees in Africa, with 1.7 million refugees from South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, Burundi, Eritrea, Rwanda, and Ethiopia.

 

Country Statistics

  • Population: 50,418,670 (2024)

  • Below Poverty Line: 30.1%(2020)

  • Life Expectancy: 69.7 yrs (2024)

  • Literacy Rate: 74% (2024)

  • Human Development Index (HDI): 159 (2024)

  • Global Climate Risk Index: 31 (2019)

About the Children

  • The Percentage of the Population Under the Age of 17: 50% (2024)

  • Children under the age of 5 that are Underweight: 7.6% (2020)

  • The Average Years of Schooling for a child: 6.8 years (2024)

  • Leading cause of under 5: Lower respiratory infections (2019)

Causes of Death

  • HIV/AIDS (43.7%), Lower respiratory Infections (40.3%), Tuberculosis (39.1%), Malaria (37.3%), Preterm birth complications (32.1%), Stroke (24.5%), Diarrheal diseases (20.4%), Trypanosomiasis-Gambiense (African Sleeping Sickness) (2019).