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University Shows Methodist Labors
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24 Apr 1996 12:14:06
"UNITED METHODIST DAILY NEWS" by SUSAN PEEK on Aug. 11, 1991 at 13:58 Eastern,
about FULL TEXT RELEASES FROM UNITED METHODIST NEWS SERVICE (2902 notes).
Note 2901 by SUSAN PEEK on April 24, 1996 at 12:41 Eastern (2765 characters).
SEARCH: Africa University, education, United Methodist, Africa,
university
041 {2905} April 24, 1996
General Conference '96
Africa University demonstrates
fruits of United Methodist labors
DENVER (UMNS) -- Seven years ago, Africa University was a
dream and a vacant field.
Today, the first United Methodist university in southern
Africa is 300 students strong. Among its first graduates is a
United Nations nutrition staffer, a teacher in a rural girl's
school and a pastor who has doubled the size of her congregation
-- from 800 to 1,600 -- in just two years.
A celebration of Africa University -- including a performance
by members of the university's choir -- capped the afternoon
session of the 1996 General Conference April 23. In later
sessions, the 998 delegates will decide on whether to approve the
$20 million funding package for the university.
As with the two previous quadrennial assemblies, officials of
the university are asking to receive $10 million in local-church
apportionments and $10 million in "second-mile" giving over the
next four years.
In hailing the growth of Africa University, assistant vice-
chancellor James Salley, noted that the school has grown from a
handful of students to nearly 300 in four colleges: theology,
business, education and agriculture.
He praised various annual conferences and other groups for
their financial support of the university, and introduced Korean
Methodist Bishop Sun-Doh Kim. Kwan-Lin Methodist Church, in Seoul,
reportedly among the largest Methodist congregations in the world,
recently donated $1 million for the construction of a chapel on
the Africa University campus.
Two university graduates also offered thanks to the General
Conference for United Methodism' support of the school. Paulo
Filipe Bunga of Angola, now with the United Nations food
development office in Mozambique, said his education by the
church-related college helped him understand the importance of
helping people find "food for the body as well as the soul."
The Rev. Tsitsi Moyo, also a 1994 graduate, now pastor of St.
Andrew's United Methodist Church in Harare, Zimbabwe, recounted
her own journey from a girl denied the prospect of a formal
education, to a trained pastor serving a fast-growing, urban
church. "At Africa University I learned to flex my spiritual
muscles," she said. "For that, and for my ministry, I am
grateful."
The United Methodist Church is related to more than 120
schools, colleges and universities in the U.S., Europe, Asia and
Africa.
# # #
--M. Garlinda Burton
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