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Supporting Ministry Forges Ahead With Infrastructure Initiatives Across Zambia

Maranatha Volunteers International works with Adventist leaders to support growth.

Maranatha Volunteers International and Adventist Review

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Supporting Ministry Forges Ahead With Infrastructure Initiatives Across Zambia
Mwami Secondary School Education and Evangelism Center in Mwami, Eastern Province, Zambia. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]

During the first four months of 2025 supporting ministry Maranatha Volunteers International has made exciting progress on two school campuses in Zambia. Crews are expanding the Sala Primary School in the south and constructing the Mwami Secondary School from the ground up in the east.

Both institutions are top priorities of the Adventist Church in Zambia, regional church leaders shared. “Maranatha’s work on these campuses will enhance their ability to provide intellectual and spiritual guidance to the next generation of Adventists and share the gospel message to more people,” they said.

Maranatha is also bolstering the Adventist Church in southern Zambia with much-needed places of worship and water wells. Crews are preparing to begin work on this year’s wave of these projects in the coming weeks.

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Sala Primary School church was contructed by Maranatha Volunteers International in Zambia. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]

In the Eastern Province town of Mwami, crews have nearly completed the Education and Evangelism Center (EEC) that will house the new secondary school. This large building includes 14 classrooms surrounding a central auditorium. Mwami is an Adventist hub that includes a hospital, nursing school, churches, and two elementary schools, but lacks a high school. Because of this, many children aren’t educated beyond the primary level. Maranatha’s completion of the Mwami Secondary School will help to solve this problem. In addition to the EEC, crews have drilled a water well and leveled a soccer field for the campus and are beginning to construct its bathrooms.

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When Maranatha agreed to expand Sala Primary School in 2023, 1,300 students were packed into tiny classrooms, and most students sat on the floor. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]

At the Sala Primary School, crews have recently completed a church building and are entering the final stages of work on eight new classrooms, a water well, and bathrooms. When Maranatha agreed to expand the school in 2023, 1,300 students were packed into tiny classrooms. Some crowded onto what wooden benches were available, but most students sat on the floor and even on each other’s laps when necessary.

Since 2023 Sala’s enrollment has reached 1,500. Maranatha’s construction is drawing attention, and a government policy guaranteeing free education also requires schools to accept all incoming students. Sala’s enrollment spike has heightened the importance of more classroom space and its shortage of teachers. A volunteer group is currently helping to solve the latter issue by laying the block walls for a sixplex of staff housing, which will allow the school to hire more teachers. Maranatha will also construct two additional duplexes for this purpose.

In addition to work on educational infrastructure, crews in Zambia are preparing to construct places of worship and water wells in the nation’s south.

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Mutemangala Seventh-day Adventist Church in Zambia, one of many structures built by Maranatha Volunteers International across the country. [Photo: Maranatha Volunteers International]

“The Adventist Church in Zambia recently provided an updated list of requests for 609 church buildings and 850 water wells,” reported Maranatha’s vice president of projects Kyle Fiess. “These numbers illustrate the immense need there. And while we can’t respond to every single request we receive, Maranatha supporters have made great strides possible in Zambia. They’ve had an amazing impact and are continuing to do so.”

Maranatha worked in Zambia from 2009 to 2015, completing hundreds of projects. In 2018 Maranatha returned to Zambia in response to a request for more churches, schools, and water wells across the country.

The original version of this story was posted on the Maranatha Volunteers International news site. The nonprofit supporting ministry is not operated by the corporate Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Maranatha Volunteers International and Adventist Review

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