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Swaziland, South Africa Mission Base Mission Bases Home
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Our Story |

This isnt just food: its income, status, and a measure of security.
Julie Anderson went to Swaziland in September of 2005 to start the First Year Missionary Program. The team lived outside of the city of Mbabane for two semesters (seven months) and continued in this same location the following fall for the first part of the FYM year.
After much prayer, the leadership team felt led to move to a more rural area with fewer resources.
In January of 2006, the team relocated to the rural area of Timbutini to work with a Pastor Walter Malazo. AIM has partnered with him on several smaller projects. He has a unique vision and ability to reach his community.
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Our Vision |

Busi.
Swaziland Staff Blog
The vision of the Swaziland staff is to focus in on one community and invest in their future. Through building relationships that give the opportunity to share the reality of Christ and raise up disciples, as well as meeting the felt needs of the community, we hope to make this vision a reality. With the overwhelming needs that come as a result of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, we are constantly seeking God as to how to be His hands and feet to His people. There is a huge need for more orphanages, hospitals, schools, and Bible-teaching churches. It is the desire of many staff members in Swaziland to meet these needs within the community God has placed them in.
The intent of the ministry initiatives that the staff are making is allow the Swazi people to step up into leadership within the various ministries. The goal is for things to be Swazi run and initiated, so as to create self-sustaining ministries.
Swaziland
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Staff |

Julie Anderson
FYM Family Leader
Adventures In Missions Swaziland
My name is Julie Anderson and I've been on staff with AIM since 1996. I grew up in Cherokee, IA, and attended college at Northwestern College in St Paul, MN. After graduating in '94 with a BA in Bible and Graphic Design I worked as a graphic designer and youth worker in Minneapolis for 2 years. During that time I took my youth group on a mission trip to Matamoros Mexico with AIM and was hooked.
After 6 years on staff with AIM based in Mexico and leading trips all over Latin America, I went graduate school at Moody Bible Institute in Chicago. I received my MA in Spiritual Formation and Discipleship in '04and then headed off to Swaziland where I've been since September 2004. In January '05 I met my beautiful daughter Nosipho Elizabeth (Ellie) at the government hospital in Mbabane, Swaziland. I've been fostering her since March '05 and am in the process of adopting her. Currently I am heading up AIM's women's ministry in Swaziland, and desire to see the HOPE of Christ brought to this hurting nation! Read more on Julie's blog

Kara Walker FYM RA

Katy Howry FYM Ministry Coordinator
Katys ministry focus in Swaziland is on youth. She speaks at school assemblies and plans community youth outreaches.

Dennis Brock
Local Pastor Liaison
Dennis ministry focus is on coordinating short-term trips to Swaziland, as well as developing community pastor meetings.

Claud and Mary Crosby FYM Family Leaders
Mary and I met while working with the FYM program in inner city Philadelphia in the fall of 2001. I served three years in Philly working with crack and heroin addicts on the streets of Kensington. We then married in April of 2004. Following our wedding we moved to China serving in an inland city working primarily among students, the deaf, and Muslims. We later relocated to Swaziland in June of 2005 along with our daughter, Nondumiso. We live to see a remnant of orphans transformed into a heavenly army sent out to bring the Kingdom of God to the Muslim world. For his Glory!
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Programs |

Abstinence Pledge
A major focus of the FYM program is personal discipleship. You will be mentored by a godly man or woman, someone committed to helping you mature on your personal faith journey. This mentor will then assist you to develop mentoring relationships with young Swazi nationals. Regular group discipleship will focus on growing as a community of believers. Emphasis is placed on daily surrender and releasing anything that may keep you from close communion with God.
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Ministry |
First Year Missionary Program |

Children's Ministry
Each First Year Missionary will develop a personal ministry internship averaging about 15 hours per week. Orphanages, soup kitchens, hospitals, churches, and schools are among the organizations that will provide incredible opportunities to put your faith to work.
With a population of just over a million, experts believe Swaziland will have over 120,000 orphans within the next five years. Only a handful of orphanages provide services today, so many children are left to fend for themselves on the streets. You will be able to witness to these children, showing the love of God through your care for them. With such a high HIV infection rate, hospitals are flooded with dying patientspeople forgotten by the world who will experience Jesus through your compassion. Many of the nations evangelical churches are fighting the effects of poverty, hunger, and HIV, but they lack volunteers to adequately address the need. You will partner with Swazi Christians providing care for the hurting and hungry.

El Shaddai Orphanage
A major focus of the FYM program is personal discipleship. You will be mentored by a godly man or woman, someone committed to helping you mature on your personal faith journey. This mentor will then assist you to develop mentoring relationships with young Swazi nationals. Regular group discipleship will focus on growing as a community of believers. Emphasis is placed on daily surrender and releasing anything that may keep you from close communion with God.

The FYM team did a VBS for the children at Pastor Walters church.
The Spring 2005 FYM team spent time with orphans at the El Shaddai orphanage in the mountains of Mbabane. Through nonverbal testimony, the team shares the love of Christ through the ministry of fun and quality time.
The FYM team did a VBS for the children at Pastor Walters church. Here, they are performing a skit based on Jesus calming the storm. The rural surrounding makes for a scenic background, but also provides the risk of natural distractions (such as the cow backdrop).
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Womens Ministry |
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Julie Anderson is heading up the womens ministry in Swaziland. Currently, she has a bible study every Monday night with women from the various care points in the area. They are going through a Wycliffe study that is contextualized to Swazi culture. A major part of her ministry is relationship building and discipling. There is significant need for community and fellowship to provide emotional and spiritual support among women.
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Orphans |
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The orphan population is overwhelming. HIV/AIDS is tearing through the middle generation (ages 18-30) and wiping out the parents of children. These orphaned children are left to fend for themselves, and many times the eldest sibling becomes the parental figure in the household.
The FYM team and staff members have been investing time in the care points and hospitals. They offer the love of their Father to the fatherless (and motherless) children of the community. The vision of the base staff is not only to meet the emotional needs, but the physical needs as well. As God leads and provides, they would like to see an orphanage and a school built for these children.
More about our Swazi orphans
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Local Partners |

Pastor Walter Malazo
Pastor Walter Malazo is our local partner in Swaziland. He has a unique vision and passion for reaching out to his community and mobilizing people to help make his vision a reality. He runs 9 care points that feed hundreds of orphans each day. These facilities are run by about 50 volunteers, many being grandmas raising up their grandchildren because the middle generation is dying off due to HIV/AIDS.
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Swaziland and the Swazi Culture |
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About the size of New Jersey, Swaziland is home to beautiful mountain ranges, valleys dotted with mud huts and small villages, and luscious sugarcane fields. Tourism is a significant source of revenue for the kingdom as game parks and the vibrant, beautiful culture draw the attention of travelers.
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Swaziland and the Swazi Culture |
The Kingdom of Swaziland is a nation that has struggled to preserve cultural traditions while undergoing recent modernization efforts. Many of the traditional ceremonies have been successfully sustained. These include annual festivals and many of the dances; others have been adapted with less success. For instance, in traditional Swazi culture, virginity was long respected as a highly desirable and valuable trait for unmarried men and women. In todays society, little value is placed on a decision to abstain until marriage.

Hospital
Polygamy is practiced among much of the population, contributing to the spread of HIV\AIDS. Marital infidelity is generally expected, and remaining faithful to ones spouse is a foreign concept to many.
The family and the local community are highly regarded institutions, but as HIV/AIDS devastates families, these establishments are crumbling. Most orphans are no longer raised within their villages, but are forced out into the street or into institutions not rooted within a community. Grandparents who had expected to be taken care of in their old age find themselves raising another generation of children.
Although Christianity is the dominant religion statistically, many who claim to follow Christ are still involved in various forms of syncretism and witchcraft. Some pastors still consult witchdoctors rather than Scripture. About one-fifth of the people practice African Traditional Religion, which is incorporated into every aspect of their lives.
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