aim Kenya
The Heartbeat of AIM KENYA is to reach the MVP groups (Most Vulnerable People) with the life-saving and powerful love of Jesus.
Welcome to AIM Kenya, where our mission is to bring the hope of the Gospel and ‘help for today’ to vulnerable children and the most needy. We have seen first-hand the miracles that happen when you provide these children with the right nurturing and caring environment to thrive and grow.
Here, at AIM Kenya, we believe that every child of God deserves a chance to dream and achieve their full potential. Join us on this journey of compassion and transformation as we work together to create a better tomorrow for these remarkable young souls.
Aim & kenya
Our journey in Kenya began in 2018 when we received an invitation to partner with a children’s home serving 280 vulnerable children. Witnessing the challenging conditions they faced, we knew that something had to be done. Through dedicated efforts, we have been able to achieve significant milestones.
We built a school that ensures access to quality education, empowering these children to pursue their dreams and build a brighter future.
We also built a well that has brought an essential resource—fresh water—supporting the daily needs of both the children’s home and the local community. This infrastructure development has dramatically improved the quality of life and health in the area.
More recently AIM Kenya was formally established and registered as a non-profit in Africa, and as we faithfully followed God’s leading, incredible opportunities have opened up for us to provide life-changing medical interventions to remote tribal villages without access to medical care.
We have also partnered with a rescue center sponsored by local Kenyan churches. This center rescues young girls who face forced childhood marriage, female circumcision, and other unimaginable challenges. The girls are between the ages of 9 -14 when they arrive at the rescue center. Before coming, most of them were forbidden to attend school. We are more than privileged to not only rescue and protect these once hopeless little girls, but also through the transforming power of the gospel educate and empower them to one day go back to their villages and reach the people they once courageously left behind.
AIM Kenya is blessed to have boots on the ground as we send out missionaries and teams to serve as the hands and feet of Jesus reaching truly the most vulnerable.
our culture
Take a look at the rich culture of Kenya
Kenya 2024
RECAP OF OUR RECENT TRIP TO KENYA
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You can be a part of the transformative work at AIM Kenya and make a difference in the lives of these incredible children. Your support and involvement can help sustain and expand our efforts in providing a nurturing and caring environment for these young souls. Whether through a donation, volunteering, or spreading awareness about our mission, every contribution matters. Your generosity enables us to provide essential resources, education, and care, ensuring that these children have the opportunity to break the cycle of poverty, illiteracy, widespread diseases - but most of all hopelessness - allowing them to achieve their dreams. Join us today and be a catalyst for positive change in the lives of the children at AIM Kenya.
TOGETHER, LET'S CREATE A BRIGHTER FUTURE AND A WORLD FILLED WITH HOPE AND COMPASSION FOR EVERY CHILD IN NEED.
AIM KENYA UPDATES
Recently, AIM was able to send a group of young girls from Narok, Kenya to see the ocean for the first time. These are young ladies in their teens who presently live in a home where they have been rescued from the horrors of female genital mutilation. It was such a privilege to bless them with this trip.
AIM is currently planning our second dedicated medical missions trip to Kenya. A team of fifteen nurses and medical personnel, led by Dr. Harold Cox of Montgomery, Alabama will once again be heading out to the remotest parts of the area occupied by the Maasai tribe. Many of the natives of this area are afflicted by trachoma, a form of blindness often transmitted by flies. It can often be easily eliminated by antibiotics. Some of our AIM team were privileged to be told on the last trip that they were the first Americans to set foot in one of these tribal areas.