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ImageLifestreams International was developed in 2000 with the establishment of a Mission School in the Northwest desert of Kenya, at Kakuma Refugee Camp. Here the Sudanese “Lost boys of War ” fled for refuge from the decades old Sudanese conflict. The school was developed prepare displaced Sudanese refugees from the flood plain of the Nile to return to their native lands.

Lifestreams has produced through its missions curriculum a pool of over 600 Sudanese nationals as specialists to network with the inter-denominational First-world Church, hence the concept of “lifestreaming." The complex issues of Sudan are that 34 out of the 97 dialect are not yet written languages. Tribal solidarity and evangelism has only a six year window as mandated by the peace agreement of 2005 between the Islamic Khartoum government and the Sudanese peoples liberation movement.

Our labor pool of Spirit-filled Christian nationals needs partners to network with. We are seeking individuals and Churches that have the call and ability to contribute to the vast need amongst the indigenous people of Southern Sudan to become a separate autonomous Christian Nation. Lifestreams International is endeavoring to help them establish their own nation, a goal they have been struggling to attain for over fifty years.

Our Vision:

Lifestreams International’s vision is clearly to supply technical assistance of professional and short term operators able to network with the large number of graduates of KISOM of their four year diploma level field-work system, into the vastly diversified areas of Southern Sudan.

Our Mission in Sudan:

Our mission is to fast track the social re-development in war torn Southern Sudan of Indigenous tribal societies to be established on a Christian basis as an independent nation seceding from the nationalistic repression of the Islamic North. Our mission is also to develop an emerging Spirit-filled movement of evangelism to the 34 un-reached tribes of the South, and comprehensive in-reach to Islam.

 

About Robert and Jennifer Mincks           
    
ImageRobert and Jennifer have been involved with indigenous evangelism and movements since the late 1970’s. They began working with the complex issues of North and Central American indigenous peoples with cross-culturation and the difficulties that indigenous peoples have to deal with, in adjusting to today’s world socialization.

In 1999 their ministry began to take on a new shape dealing with the difficulties of socialization within indigenous Christian movements of North Africa, and the conflicts of socialization between Christianity and Islam.

 
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