Photo Gallery
Posted February 3, 2011
In Zambia, the life expectancy at birth has fallen to just 39 years because of the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
Collins spent his days in a dump looking for food to eat or plastics to sell. A local pastor adopted him, getting him off drugs and alcohol. Collins now tries to impact kids in situations similar to the one he was in.
In Zambia, more than one in every seven adults is living with HIV. True Love Waits volunteers, like these young people, encourage abstinence to prevent AIDS and follow God’s plan for sexual purity.
Street kids in Lusaka, Zambia, spend the day looking for food or items they can sell and then sleep in junk yards and trash heaps.
Zambian teenagers gather in a schoolroom for a True Love Waits meeting. TLW is an international campaign to encourage youth to strive for God’s best for them through sexual purity before marriage and faithfulness during marriage.
Zambian teenagers gather in a schoolroom for a True Love Waits meeting. The teens meet once a week, forming a support group on the importance of sexual abstinence.
In Zambia, traditional healers suggest sleeping with a virgin to cure AIDS, and it’s culturally acceptable for a man to sleep with another woman if he isn’t satisfied with his wife. Through True Love Waits, teens committed to abstinence find support and encouragement.
In their weekly True Love Waits meeting, teens listen to IMB missionary Troy Lewis (blue shirt) give a funny talk on how boys and girls talk to each other when they like each other.
Street kids in Lusaka, Zambia, spend the day and evening looking through trash to find food or plastic and tin products to sell. A massive bag of plastic bottles will only fetch around US$2.00.
Street kids in Lusaka, Zambia, spend the day and evening looking through trash to find food or plastic and tin products to sell. A massive bag of plastic bottles will only fetch around US$2.00.
Street kids in Lusaka, Zambia, spend the day and evening looking through trash to find food or plastic and tin products to sell. A massive bag of plastic bottles will only fetch around US$2.00.
This clinic outside Lusaka, Zambia, provides HIV/AIDS patients with the drugs needed to treat the disease and improve their quality of life.
IMB missionary Troy Lewis plays with kids at Streams of Living Waters School in Lusaka, Zambia. Lewis partners with multiple organizations to fight the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Zambia.
IMB missionary Troy Lewis visits the home of a man with AIDS, asking about his needs and sharing the Gospel with him. The man decided to follow Christ that day.
IMB missionary Troy Lewis visits the home of a man with AIDS. Lewis asked about the man’s situation and needs, then spent 90 minutes sharing the Gospel with him. The man accepted Christ that day.
IMB missionary Troy Lewis (tan vest) talks with a Chonwe Rural Impact worker being trained to do home visits with HIV/AIDS patients to offer suggestions on healthy living and report back on where they are living. The goal is to share Christ with people who are home bound.
Christians gather for worship at a Baptist church in Lusaka, Zambia. For some congregations, overcoming the negative image of AIDS is a challenge, but churches are slowly mobilizing to fight the pandemic.
IMB missionary Troy Lewis says the church has not always been a safe place for people to reveal they have AIDS. “There is a lot of stigma, a lot of discrimination,” he says. Slowly, Zambia churches are mobilizing to help fight the pandemic.





















