Food Parcels Bless Hardworking Family of 14

Food Parcels Bless Hardworking Family of 14

Vasile in Ukraine is a hardworking man, trying to fulfill his God-given calling to provide for his family. But the money he makes in construction work doesn’t stretch around to meet all the family’s needs. Besides feeding 14 children, there is clothing to buy, school...
From Human Sacrifice to Serving a Living God

From Human Sacrifice to Serving a Living God

For more than a century, no one dared move the six stones that stood in the middle of the village, marking the place where six girls had been buried alive in 1905. Several Liberian bush villages had been at war, and the village of Gbarjorkor was losing. The villagers...
Syrian Refugees Face Harsh Winter

Syrian Refugees Face Harsh Winter

Thousands of people who had been trapped in Aleppo, Syria, living in despair and fear, have been able to flee in recent weeks. Many are fleeing to wherever they can—to safer places inside Syria or to Jordan, Turkey or Lebanon. Some who fled are arriving in Lebanon’s...
Rebuilding Begins for Hurricane Victims in Haiti

Rebuilding Begins for Hurricane Victims in Haiti

After weeks of preparation and research, CAM’s rebuilding project for Hurricane Matthew victims in Haiti is underway. Two bases have been set up in heavily affected areas. One base is in the seaside town of Jeremie. The other is in the mountains, where people have...
Clothing Bundle Project

Clothing Bundle Project

What would it be like to live in a cold house in the winter because you cannot afford to properly heat your home? How would it be to go without a coat because you don’t have enough money to buy one? For many people in Eastern Europe this is reality— families struggle...
Forgotten? Not by God!

Forgotten? Not by God!

Help-for-the-Elderly —From a report by Mrs. Jamila Kurtz, CAM staff member in Kenya Maina* (pronounced “My-ee-na”) was born into the Kalenjin tribe in Kenya. As a young boy, his earlobes were stretched and he often drank the blood of a cow, which were common practices...