Charity organizations play a crucial role in improving lives across Mozambique, focusing on various social, economic, and health challenges. Water4Life Mozambique, founded by Arnie Eastburn, provides clean water and spiritual support to underserved communities, while the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) works to uplift vulnerable populations through health, literacy, and economic initiatives. AMURT operates with a focus on community-based development and disaster relief, encouraging self-reliance. The Egmont Trust addresses the impact of HIV/AIDS on children and families, and Girls Not Brides works to end child marriage and empower girls through education and advocacy.
Water4Life Mozambique was founded by Arnie Eastburn, who envisioned aiding Mozambique through initiatives like church-building and drilling for water. The organization’s focus on water scarcity became more personal after a life-changing experience in Maganja da Costa in 2003. In the scorching heat, Eastburn was provided with only a bucket of cold water and a bowl of heated water for a shower. Recognizing that villagers had to carry the water for miles, he used just three cups, realizing how precious water is in the community.
Fast forward to 2016, Water4Life Mozambique successfully drilled a water well in the same village, ensuring clean, accessible water for the community. Eastburn reflects on the experience, linking it to Isaiah 9:2, which speaks of light in the darkness. He relates this to both spiritual and physical renewal—the wells not only provide clean water but are built near churches, offering villagers the opportunity to hear about Jesus, the “Living Water.” The organization’s mission embodies hope for a better future, where clean water and spiritual nourishment go hand in hand.
Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN)
The Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) focuses on improving the quality of life for vulnerable populations in Asia and Africa, regardless of their background. AKDN’s holistic development approach fosters self-reliance in communities and individuals.
In 1998, AKDN and the Government of Mozambique formalized their partnership through a Cooperation for Development Agreement. Currently, AKDN employs over 1,180 people in Mozambique, with 98% being Mozambicans and 63% women. The organization primarily works in the Cabo Delgado region, focusing on enhancing health, nutrition, literacy, and economic growth.
AMURT is an international organization focused on disaster relief, rehabilitation, and development cooperation, founded in Switzerland in 1985. Its core principle is that motivated volunteers can significantly reduce human suffering, a belief that has inspired young people worldwide to contribute in a similarly efficient, non-bureaucratic manner. AMURT operates with a strong emphasis on community-based projects, encouraging maximum participation from local communities in shaping their own futures. In 2002, various national AMURT organizations, including Switzerland, formed a federation, headquartered in Uster, Switzerland.
The organization’s goals are purely charitable and not-for-profit, aiming to improve service delivery to those in need and to minimize administrative costs. AMURT focuses on assisting poor, underprivileged, and marginalized communities, as well as providing aid to victims of both natural and man-made disasters. By fostering collaboration and self-determination, AMURT works to uplift vulnerable populations and enhance their quality of life.
Today, 37.7 million people live with HIV and AIDS, yet the disease’s impact on vulnerable populations, especially children, is often overlooked in favor of stark statistics. In the 1990s, Clare Evans, a founding Trustee of Egmont, worked as an HIV & AIDS Policy Officer for ActionAid in sub-Saharan Africa, witnessing firsthand the devastating toll on societies and families.
In southern Mozambique, near the Swaziland border, the Egmont Partner Associação Wona Sanana is helping 300 families caring for HIV-positive, disabled, and AIDS-affected children. These children receive regular health check-ups, while their caregivers are trained to provide proper care. The caregivers are further supported through economic initiatives such as business and agricultural training, along with resources like seeds and fertilizers, helping to enhance the families’ livelihoods and support the children’s well-being.
Girls Not Brides is a global network of over 1,400 civil society organizations from more than 100 countries, dedicated to ending child marriage and enabling girls to achieve their full potential. The network unites diverse groups to address the causes and impacts of child marriage through collaboration and advocacy.
SWAA-Mozambique, established in 2002, is a nonprofit organization focused on tackling HIV/AIDS and child marriage. Its mission is to mobilize communities and build their capacity to prevent, mitigate, and control the effects of these issues. By empowering girls and women, SWAA-Mozambique seeks to drive change at both local and national levels, fostering sustainable solutions to these critical challenges.
This list of charities in Yemen isn’t the whole list of those out there, and AAM Nation Care is yet another amazing organization caring about people and their future.