For more information on the “Not by Bread Alone: Stories of the Saints in Africa” series, go to https://notbybreadalonefilm.com/en/
For more information in French, go to https://notbybreadalonefilm.com/fr/
To see all of our posts about The Church in Africa, go to https://dev.interpreterfoundation.org/category/africa/
A Place of Peace in War-Torn Goma
Goma, a large city in eastern DR Congo had been plagued for decades by warring militias competing for access to valuable minerals and by active volcanoes whose flowing lava had cut areas of the city into pieces. Now, in the spring of 2020, it came under a new threat: severe famine.
Provoking further food panic, the United Nations World Food Program had destroyed a large cache of rice contaminated by toxins in nearby Bukavu. Similarly tainted food stocks in Goma were disposed of by burying them in the crack of one of the nearby volcanoes. Guards were hired to keep hungry people away but, lured by bribes, they allowed a group of famished children into the crack in an attempt to retrieve food. The children were overcome by toxic gas. Several were able to escape by their own means, others were rescued by people from Goma, but a little girl perished. In addition, corrupt businessmen influenced the government to destroy non-polluted food stocks to inflate food prices. The ongoing presence of armed militia groups and invading troops prevented farmers from cultivating their fields. Covid 19 and malaria became aggravating factors to the deaths of those weakened by hunger; the death toll was highest among children.[2]
Alarmed by the situation, a group of former French-speaking missionaries, including Rémy and Shirley Guérin and Chris Miasnik, moved into action. The Guérins raised funds from other members of the Dijon, France ward to help sustain the Goma group. And with the help of the Area Presidency, additional needs of the fledgling group of Saints and many others were addressed. In Goma itself, these efforts were led by a courageous (unofficial) group leader named Charles SHABANI MULUVYA.
Two years earlier, Charles had left Goma and traveled the length of Lac Kivu in a small boat to Bukavu, and then continued overland to Uvira where he could be baptized by members of the church group there on 16 December 2018. With a wife and four children to provide for, he had hardly enough money to pay for the trip. But he had enough faith!
Starting with his family and just a handful of friends, they met in a small clapboard home to discuss the Gospel. They were not yet authorized to hold sacrament meetings. Their numbers grew until they were recognized as an official residential group of the Church. Despite near starvation, Covid confinement, joblessness, and a spewing volcano, they remained united in faith. After Charles received the Melchizedek priesthood, they were allowed to hold sacrament meetings in a more spacious accommodation, though it was furnished spartanly and had uneven dirt floors
On 30 July 2023, they met in Goma’s Union Hotel to organize the Goma DR Congo Branch. Brother SHABANI was called as the first branch president. On 22 October 2023, just two months and three weeks later, the Goma Branch held its first Sunday meetings in a wonderful new building—a place of peace in war-torn Goma.[5]
Because of conditions in Goma, the mission president has not yet been authorized to travel there, and no full-time missionaries have yet been assigned to the city. But thanks to a generous donation by Chris Miasnik, he and I hope to meet with Charles and other members from Goma, Bukavu, and Uvira to learn more about their history in May-June 2024— either a Rwandan city near the border with the DR Congo or—if authorized—in the cities themselves.