Hope For Hossana

Hope For Hossana Adams Thermal Systems Foundation programs supporting children and families in Hossana and Ottoro Ethiopia

03/30/2023
02/26/2022

We recently completed some renovations to the high school building at Adams Thermal Academy in Hosanna!

Over the past few months, we’ve made some structural improvements to the building as well as upgrading the electrical system and giving it a new coat of paint. We’ve been told by local residents that our high school building is one of the best school facilities in the whole city. We’re grateful to be able to offer this resource to the poorest families in the area so that their children will have the opportunity to earn a degree.

The high school building contains classrooms, teachers and admin offices, science labs, a computer lab and modern bathrooms. Watch for more reports from some of our other construction projects in the near future!

02/19/2022
09/15/2021

A celebration of God's ongoing work in Ethiopia

07/22/2021
04/28/2021
03/12/2021
01/08/2021

It’s Christmas in Ethiopia!

Ethiopia uses the Julian calendar, so the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and Evangelical Churches celebrate the birth of Christ on January 7. The day is known as Ganna in Ethiopia. The day before Ganna, people fast all day. On the morning of the 7th, everyone dresses in white, most in a traditional ‘shamma’ which is a thin white cotton wrap, and attend the early mass at 4:00 AM. The Priests wear turbans and red and white robes and carry beautiful embroidered and fringed umbrellas.

Modern Orthodox Churches in Ethiopia are built in concentric circles. The choir assembles in the outer circle and the congregation, holding flickering candles and in a slow procession circles the church three times before occupying the second circle. The center circle is the holiest place in the church, which is where the priest serves the Holy Communion.

Modern Evangelical Christmas services in Ethiopia very much resemble the services we are used to in the US, with a pulpit, pews and choir arranged in standard church fashion. The exception that adds beauty and grace to the service is the traditional Ethiopian white clothing standard.

At day break on the morning of the 7th, the fast is broken with a light meal. Later in the day a Doro Wat (a spicy stew with meat, vegetables and sometimes eggs is eaten. Injera, Ethiopian flatbreads are used to scoop up and eat the stew.

Twelve days after Ganna, on January 19th Ethiopians begin Timkat, the three day celebration of the baptism of Jesus Christ, and the beginning of his earthly ministry.

Merry Christmas to our students, families and staff in Ethiopia. May this season of celebration be a blessing and an encouragement to each and every one of you!

10/10/2020

We're Watching it GROW!

It was 1991 when Ethiopia began emerging from a socialist education system to a federal system. By 2009, there were marked increases in the number of children accessing public education along with decreased illiteracy and drop-out rates. However, the poor and rural areas of Ethiopia were not participating in these positive education trends. This was especially apparent in the category of female youth literacy which was below 50% in 2009.

Also in 2009, Ethiopia was still one of the top 10 countries in the world with the highest out-of-school children populations (2 million). At that time, Ethiopia was also among the top 10 countries that accounted for 72% of the global population of illiterate adults.

So what happened in 2009? In September of that year in the capital of the SNNPR (southern Ethiopia), a small private school reserved only for the "poorest of the poor" was established. Today, we know this school as Adams Thermal Academy Hosanna. And just as it was back in 2009, our objective remains the same - to reserve every seat in our KG through 12th grade program for those children who have no other opportunity to get an education. Our enrollment criteria remains the same, welcoming only children who would otherwise be caught in the perpetual cycle of generational poverty. Our only requirement is that they come and learn. Adams Thermal Academy provides everything a child will need for school, including clothing, nutrition, healthcare and transportation.

Our Hosanna campus was launched in 2009 with three buildings (classrooms, administration, kitchen) and a garden. The school offered kindergarten through 4th grade and enrolled 209 students in its first year. From the beginning, the school was designed to grow in grade levels and overall capacity until the campus would ultimately become a full, K-12 academic program. That milestone was reached in 2019.

This fall we're preparing to pull 640 students off the streets and into the classroom for the 2020-21 academic year. Since 2009, we've added two libraries, a kindergarten building, an eating area, storage capacity, a sports field and a high school. In just the past 36 months, we've added science and computer labs as well as high-speed internet access to our program. And we're currently under construction with more classrooms, bathrooms and fencing to keep our children safe throughout the day.

What a privilege it's been to watch this school grow and flourish in a country so desperately in need of education solutions. And we're most humbled to have the opportunity to share this journey with friends and supporters from all throughout North America. Thank you to each of you who have loved and cared for these children and our incredible staff in Hosanna. You are precious to us. And God receives all the glory for orchestrating the people, resources and timing to make this miracle our reality. Lean not on your own understanding. But in all your ways acknowledge the Lord, and He will make your paths straight (Proverbs 3:5-6).

Address

47920/5th Street
Canton, SD
57013

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Hope For Hossana posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Hope For Hossana:

Share