HEART TO HEART CAMPAIGN TO REFUGEES IN MALAWI
													
													
													CAMPAIGN
HEART TO HEART
Let’s come together to bring food, dignity, and hope to as many people as possible living in the Dzaleka refugee camp in Malawi.
More than 56,000 men, women, and children live there in extremely vulnerable conditions. Most have fled war, persecution, and hunger.
With international aid drastically reduced, thousands are now without access to basic food. Fraternity Without Borders, through the Ubuntu Nation Project, is working directly in the camp — and now we need you to help continue providing food, dignity, and a future.
Will you join us in reaching out to our brothers and sisters in need?
													
													about the project
dzaleka refugee camp - malawi
													Dzaleka is one of the largest refugee camps in Africa, currently home to nearly 60,000 people who were forced to flee their home countries due to war and persecution. Most refugees come from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, but also from Burundi, Rwanda, Ethiopia, and other African nations.
The camp was established in 1994 to receive survivors of the Rwandan genocide.
Today, refugees living in Dzaleka are not allowed to leave the camp. They cannot work, study, or even move freely around the country. They live in a constant state of vulnerability, with their basic civil and social rights denied.
In response to this harsh reality, the Ubuntu Nation Project was born in 2018 — with the mission of offering a symbolic homeland built on welcoming, dignity, and opportunity.