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In 1998 a church adopted the Datooga people group and covenanted to pray for them. Today, the Datooga are coming to know who Jesus is and how he can change their lives. “It was some experience to sit under the trees with the villagers and hear them talk of their openness to the gospel and to see the changes brought to the village as the result of the Gospel coming to them.” These were the words of a church group after a recent visit to the Datooga in Tanzania. Why did they go? Because in 1998 they had adopted this people group and covenanted to pray for them. Today, Pastor Emmanuel Shilikale pastors a church of Datooga in a town called Olipiru.
A Church among the Datooga The Datooga are coming to know who Jesus is and how He can change their lives - but it wasn’t always that way. Gene Christian, a member of Aim’s first church planting team among the Datooga, remarked that the people were gripped by ancestor worship. A sickness would raise the question as to what spirits were offended and how to appease them. A medium would be consulted to find out where the offense was and what the solution would be. Gene related that there was power there. This was the type of power that kept the Datooga from the freedom found in the Good News of Jesus Christ. So how did it happen? David Hennigh, who led the first team, remembers that his father had made a survey in the 1960’s amongst the Sukuma. It was during that survey that the Datooga were discovered by Aim, they were neighbors and enemies of the Sukuma and known for their viciousness. God laid the Datooga on David’s heart and so started the impetus to seek them out. He began by encouraging prayer for them through Aim’s Adopt a People program. This led to mobilizing a church planting team – some members being from the church that had adopted the Datooga!
It’s amazing that David’s father heard about the Datooga because the Sukuma recognized them as an enemy to be feared, and yet it is Pastor Shilikale, a Sukuma, who is now faithfully shepherding them and sharing the Gospel with more Datooga. It was obvious there was a lot of prayer going on for the Datooga. David Hennigh recently wrote, “Today, work in the Mariwanda area amongst the Datooga continues. The work at Olpiro continues to impact that area while another work has been started around five hours away in another Datooga community. Praise God for the way that He is impacting the Datooga with the hope to be found in Jesus!” This is the power of prayer and an example of the process God often uses to establish his Church amongst a people group. Prayer is at the heart of this process – God laying on the hearts of his servants a burden for those outside of his eternal Kingdom. This burden then translates itself into mobilizing more people to pray, which leads to God calling chosen individuals to be his ambassadors to them. And these people, backed by the prayer of many others, results in the display of God’s power and purpose in transforming lives, and birthing a new Christ-centred community – the local church. Imagine this process still needs to take place amongst the remaining 950+ Unreached People Groups of Africa. Aim believes whole heartedly in this process and that is why we want to increase the reach and effectiveness of mobiling prayer for the unreached. You may be called to be an ambassador of Christ to one of these people groups. Or you may be called right now, where you are, to be an advocate for them in prayer. Pray for africaIn Aim we believe our job isn’t complete until there is a Christ-centred church among all the peoples of Africa. Join us in bringing the Good News of Jesus to them. |





















