Photo Gallery
There are at least three babies abandoned in the greater Johannesburg area each day.
In 1999 there were around 50 babies abandoned in Johannesburg each month. At last count there are now at least three babies abandoned in the greater Johannesburg area every day!
In 1999 Cheryl Allen partnered with Berea Baptist Mission Church to install a bin in a “hole in the wall” where mothers could anonymously leave their unwanted babies.
“[The Door of Hope is] offering an alternative solution to abortion, abandonment and abuse and for any orphans,” says Allen.
“We believe that no child is a mistake,” says volunteer Nicole Gillette. Each rescued baby is cared for in a Door of Hope home until he or she can be put up for adoption.
“Aunties” and volunteers daily shower the children with love and attention while providing for their basic needs.
“I think abandoned babies are very close to [God's] heart,” says Cheryl Allen. “Because we’re doing His work, He provides [for our needs].”
“We’re not just doing this to save babies,” declares Allen. “We’re doing this as a ministry to Jesus so that we can share the Gospel.”
Allen prays “that as God saved them once in giving them life, [and] as God saved them twice in bringing them to us … that God would do the final save and save their souls.”
The Door of Hope workers pray for individuals, couples or families who are willing and able to open their hearts and home to babies who have been left abandoned or orphaned.
Allen emphasizes that “the Door of Hope saves lives, relies on God [and] impacts eternity.”













