History

Since its inception in 2011 following Rev. John Deng Ater mission trip to then autonomy Southern Sudan, which later seceded from Sudan and becomes an independence Republic of South Sudan on July 9, 2011 after decades of African’s longest civil war that claimed millions of lives.The heart-rending stories from the remnants, especially orphans, street and abandon children, compelled Rev. Ater to initiate Orphans’ Scholarship Program, the program that provides financial assistance for education and care to South Sudanese orphans who are living in refugee camps (Kenya and Uganda).
In 2013 this program was extended to orphans internally displaced and residing inside South Sudan with its Headquarter located in Yei, former Central Equatoria state. But, following political upheaval in Juba, South Sudan capital in 2016, Yei was seriously affected and left with no access to humanitarian aid and other means of survival. As security situation escalated, the organization was left with no choice than to evacuate orphans along with their caretakers to Juba, the place now considered to be home for these disadvantaged children.