Will Power Podcast by Will Humphreys

How Dr. Charles Mulli Sold an Empire to Save 40,000 Lives

Will Humphreys Season 3 Episode 12

What does it take to walk away from a multi-million dollar business empire to serve the homeless? On this episode of the Will Power Podcast, we sit down with Dr. Charles Mulli, a man whose life is a masterclass in resilience and faith.

Dr. Mulli's story begins in the depths of despair, abandoned by his parents at age five and begging on the streets of Kenya. After nearly taking his own life at age 16, a miraculous encounter set him on a path of radical transformation. He rose to become one of Kenya's most successful entrepreneurs, only to hear a divine call that would change the course of history: "I want you to be a father to the fatherless."

Dr. Mulli shares how he exercised the "Will" to sell every asset he owned and the "Power" he found in the Gospel of forgiveness. Today, the Mully Children’s Family (MCF) has rescued over 40,000 children, turning "destitute" street kids into world-class doctors, lawyers, and leaders.

Key Discussion Points:

  • The Survival Instinct: How childhood abandonment forged a resilient will to survive and succeed.
  • The Tipping Point: Why a stolen car triggered a three-year spiritual crisis that led to a global ministry.
  • Radical Sacrifice: The mental and emotional strength required to sell a fleet of buses and oil businesses to live among the poor.
  • The Miracle of the Well: How prayer literally changed the climate and ecosystem of a barren land.
  • The Science of Forgiveness: Why Dr. Mulli believes forgiveness is the "powerful tool" that unlocks a child's potential.
  • Legacy Building: How MCF became the largest family in the world.

Send us a text

Virtual Rockstars specialize in helping support or replace all non-clinical roles.
Learn how a Virtual Rockstar can help scale your physical therapy practice.

Subscribe here to our completely free Stress-Free PT Newsletter for your weekly dose of joy.

SPEAKER_01:

Rockstar for today's episode, I went all the way to Kenyan Africa to film this interview in person. And you might think I'm exaggerating, but literally at the beginning of November, I was in Kenyan, Africa, and one of the main drivers was to meet Charles Mully. He is one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the world. He was homeless in Kenyan as a young child. His parents literally left him to be homeless. They couldn't afford to feed him, so they just walked away from him. And for years, he begged on the streets for food, only to become one of the most successful entrepreneurs. But Rockstars, this story takes a turn for the amazing. When he is told by God one day to sell everything he owns as a business owner and to focus on rescuing homeless children in Kenya. This story is so profound. So go watch that documentary, and I want you to be really attuned to this in-person interview with Charles Moley. As we are talking to him, he's going to talk about the power of purpose, the power of vision and values, which, by the way, were plastered all over his first home. He has 11 campuses, is what they call them now. It's called the Moley's Children's Family Organization, and they have raised over 40,000 children since that time. He is a global leader in how purpose and profits can make real change in the world. If you're looking for something to inspire you today, pay close attention to today's episode, go watch that documentary, and then revisit your business. Because I promise you, you're going to find the capability to not only overcome hard teams, hard things, but to 10x your scale because there's a reason why. Enjoy the show. Thank you so much for taking some time to be with us today. It has been a pleasure to be here with your family.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, thank you very much indeed. It is our pleasure and our joy to have you here, and even other uh visitors to those who have come from abroad, especially from America as the uh in the in the in the Canada, Canada and the USA.

SPEAKER_01:

Yes, it's been a phenomenal trip. And I know you get visitors from across the world who come to your facility, and uh your story is one of the most beautiful examples of following God's direction to help other people I've ever heard. Would you mind sharing with the audience your story of how you were born and just some of the main pivotal moments of your life so that people can understand how we ended up sitting in these chairs together today?

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, uh, thank you so much, and welcome to Mooli Children's Family, the largest family in the world.

SPEAKER_01:

The largest family in the world.

SPEAKER_00:

Amen. And uh this has been uh over the last 36 years of existence, uh, since uh the Lord God touched my heart uh to really uh to start this kind of a ministry. I am my background is entrepreneur and really business. And uh I started uh my business when I was uh young, at the age of 20, 20, 21, uh when I started doing business. And the reason is that uh I never went to school for long uh because due to lack of school fees and uh uh poverty, and uh my family abandoned me, my own mother and the father.

SPEAKER_01:

I think that's an important part of the story, if I can jump in, because how old were you when your mom and dad abandoned you?

SPEAKER_00:

I was five years old, and the sixth year is when I realized that uh my mom, my dad was not around, nowhere to be seen, and that was the beginning of troubles on me. Um for ten years. I had never found them. I never met them. And so I grew up with the begging uh the as such a street or in the communities, begging here and there, especially for food to survive. And so it was really crucial. I went to school for uh quite a few years. The I covered uh eight uh classes in four years, and uh God has blessed me with a very uh uh smart uh mind. And uh I I I always was in the leading in the class, even though I never attended full-time. But anyway, I dropped out of school in grade eight. And that's when I was about fifteen, sixteen years and I found myself a useless, a young man crying and asking God, whom I never knew. But what happened? What happened? Why? And I always remembered uh that my father always uh beat my mother very badly and uh mostly blood from her mouth, and she was screaming, and uh it was really terrible. That went in my mind, in my heart for all the years. But then when I was 16 years old is when uh I decided to commit suicide because I found that there was no use of me uh being able to live and longer. And uh that my age mates were in school, they had to go to secondary school, and myself I had no hope. And so due to that fact, I made that decision to cut uh my life short. And therefore I went somewhere uh where there was uh a brinch and I wanted to jump over down and then in uh after some times I felt somebody uh touch me in the shoulder here and uh I looked behind and then I found it's uh young man but older than me. And I he asked me, uh, would you follow me? I would like to go with you to uh somewhere. And uh I said where I said a church. I did not know the meaning of a church and what church can do to me because there were also churches I could hear there are churches, but uh I never got any help. But then I said, yes, we walked with this man and then to that direction to the east of the place where I stood, and I said to myself, to this man. But then we entered to a church. I found people singing, Africans clapping hands, and there I was looking pale and tears. I I I could not understand how these people are so happy, and in that moment that the preacher came up with uh the gospel of Jesus Christ uh about the power of forgiveness, and I remembered how I was so angry about my father, and I was saying anytime I I will meet wherever I will I will fight him, yeah, because now I have a big young man, 16 years old.

SPEAKER_01:

And you were ready to fight him.

SPEAKER_00:

I was ready. Yeah, you know, it was really timely uh that uh I needed that. And the preacher spoke about the power of forgiveness and how the Lord Jesus Christ came and died for the whole world, and whoever believed in him should not perish but have eternal life. And therefore, I felt I was oppressed. I had reached to the war because that's why I wanted to take away my my life. And thus the preacher, when he said he wants to pray for those who want to uh to be truthful, I raised my hand and I said, God, help me save me from my situation. And uh then I felt uh relieved and uh I I I was prayed for and uh I was calm. But that was not the beginning of joy, it was not the beginning of easy life, no, it wasn't. It still was hard because after I left uh it took a long time for me to study and the Bible, but also struggling to get food also. Yes. And so the with a good samaritan, I was able also to get uh uh something for myself. And then I started my the journey to look for a job in the city of Nairobi, eighty or five kilometers away from where I lived to the city of Nairobi. And so that that was now the beginning of me opened my eyes. I cannot tell you the man who really bit my shoulder here and then I looked at him and then we walked with him to the church. I've never seen him.

SPEAKER_01:

You've never seen that God said I've never seen him. So this angel of God. Yeah, but whether it was an actual angel or human, he was just being an angel.

SPEAKER_00:

He was really a major uh because when even now when I look at it, I it sounded like unbelievable. Yeah. How on earth? And that I had I was there for at the bridge for quite some times. And then I uh somebody's you know, beating my shoulder behind, and then I looked and found oh somebody. Then we walked. So the the right word is really an angel because I feel like it was the angel of the Lord who saved me. I would have really died.

SPEAKER_01:

You would have died that day.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I I would have jumped over, and uh that would have been the end for me. But God saved me, and then I reached to Narodi. There were so many of the problems I tried to beg, but uh I fortunately I was able, God helped me to uh get a place, and that place was a nation family, and uh they opened for me. They uh I I got an employment, and uh that employment was to uh clean the house and uh wash dishes, and the goodness of everything was about every day getting food, breakfast, lime.

SPEAKER_01:

For the first time in your life, you have a house. You're living in a remember in the movie you talked about eating some of the food you ate was the food that the family didn't eat. But it has dinner and then you'd eat what was left over.

SPEAKER_00:

Exactly. That's what very, very true. And uh that was now for me, I was very happy. Yeah. And there was no other good time like when I came from the streets and found a place where I could get food every day, every day. And so that main motivated me to work and work hard. And uh the, you know, without limitation. And I I worked with a lot of confidence and uh with a lot of joy. And so that's how it went.

SPEAKER_01:

Interesting. And you know, I wish um to do this episode properly, I would need to talk to you for about four hours. Because this is the best story. So I'm gonna ask everyone watching to please watch the Molly movie. You can it's a documentary that you guys can watch on uh Prime Video is how I found your your video. And it goes through this detailed journey. If it's okay, I'd like to summarize just so that we can move to this point. But this idea of you you start working for this family, you're living in there, you're basically just keeping things clean, and the mom sees potential in you and puts you in charge of this massive farm. You're you you have hundreds of people that you're supervising. So you went from being homeless, begging for food to now you're a responsible leader in this home. And you meet your wife who works there, beautiful wife, who's a big part of the story, and honestly, guys, watch the video because she's she deserves her own movie as well. And then you become an entrepreneur. And this is so interesting because you go from being homeless to being one of the most successful people in Kenya as an entrepreneur. So can you describe what life was like for you at that point? You start having kids. What was what was that part of your life like?

SPEAKER_00:

Uh well, uh let me say first that uh uh having worked so hard and uh God bless me to help uh little man, not that much. And then uh I entered into uh business uh on taxes.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, that's right, taxes.

SPEAKER_00:

Yes, taxes, yeah, tax, taxes, and therefore after that then bought a fleet of buses, and then uh I I I got the supply disposition of uh gas and oil in the supplying to the uh Western Kenya. Yeah, uh Western Kenya. Uh it's a big, you know, uh we used to call province. And that was my area supplying uh gas. And I remember also some of the trucks came from Congo and Uganda, uh all the way to Mombasa, and then we pass through our stores where we used to supply them with the the the the the gas sender and and and and and and and so forth. So I grew grew up, I had also a business on uh uh real estate, and uh we used also to give money to people by interest. So so so that they could buy cars or they could buy even house or whatever. And so they I I became uh really a wealthy man at my age, and I was too young. I remember also was able to build uh pioneers for my family and uh stone build, like just like you.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, this house is beautiful.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, and uh it it was great. Anyway, uh when I was still doing business and uh my car was stolen by in Nairobi.

SPEAKER_01:

I went to this is the pivotal moment where things change. So for the audience, this is the part of the movie that's very important to pay attention to. So you're very successful. You're flying around the world, I want to add. You're flying around the world. There's a scene in New York where you're in the towers, you're like, man, I've made it. I am a global successful entrepreneur. You have more money than you could have dreamed of having as an eight-year-old. And now you have your car stolen.

SPEAKER_00:

Yes, and that time uh was uh the very best time ever in my life, and enjoying it. The opposite moving everywhere, going Germany and uh USA, and uh uh when when I record this, I see it is like yeah, impossible. Yeah. Only God can make that happen. Because it's just like a dream. And so anyway, uh one time my car was stolen when I was in ROB, and then it uh that now made me to think about my early time when I was young.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

Because I had forgotten about my my life when I was young, and you know, when you have uh uh wealth and you you forget. People forget.

SPEAKER_01:

It's for sure.

SPEAKER_00:

We are human beings.

SPEAKER_01:

We get used to whatever we have.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. And so the the the the st the stolen car, I've never found it even today. Yeah. And therefore, that made me to for three years, 1986 to 1989, I was thinking about where God uh where that car was lost. I always remembered that I never gave them money.

SPEAKER_01:

As you were parking your car, there were these street boys and said, Hey, we'll watch your car if you give us money. And you said, No, don't, I'm not gonna give you money. And so it wasn't the car being stolen, it was the boys that in your head that really resonated. Because you I think you you said in the movie you felt connected to those boys like that. You saw yourself in it.

SPEAKER_00:

I saw my eyes. I when I looked at them, and uh, even when I saw uh uh women carrying children at the back and walking in the street, I felt like myself. I saw myself in the eyes, and uh that one now never gave me peace. In the year 1989, November 17, uh is when I could not work anymore. I was in my office and I took my car. I decided to go home so that I could rest and then go to see that a doctor uh because I I felt upset and uh things were turning around. Yeah. And God was working uh uh in me and uh trying to the voice telling me you are the one to go to rescue and be the father of the fatherless. Those children, they need a father. You are the one, you have man, you I blow you up, I gave you everything, you have everything, and I I want you to be the father to them.

SPEAKER_01:

And all the homeless that you could find, yes.

SPEAKER_00:

For three years uh searching, three years, 1986 to 1989, and so that year, uh 1989, 17th November, is when now uh I couldn't, I took my car, I was going home, I just got lost, I went the way to Uganda, that road to Uganda, and I found myself at a bridge. Uh, that bridge I was crossing, then where I stopped. But I could not understand for uh over 35 miles that I covered not knowing where I'm going. Yes, aimlessly, just driving. I don't know where I was going. And when I left my office, I told myself that I was going to my house to rest and also to ask my wife to come with me to Oshtow. So that's how it was. But anyway, God had a purpose, and uh therefore from that time I had a time with my children and then my wife.

SPEAKER_01:

How many children did you have at this time?

SPEAKER_00:

But that time I had eight.

SPEAKER_01:

You had eight children at this time. And your children were living a very good life.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, very good life, and I had not one car, but several cars. So we we we lived our life of afference. Yeah and and so then I say to them, to my family, now look up here. Me, the Lord has said I will serve him all the years of my life, and I will be the father to the fatherless in this country and beyond. And I will never ever I will never return back. I'm going to be uh the servant. I'm going to be the father of all these children, boys and girls, the little one and the bigger one. So the following day, then I started the Walk and uh but it went for some times, and so many people opposed my idea because I was a leader in that church.

SPEAKER_01:

And you were selling everything you owned. You made a decision to sell every business, all of your assets. If you were going to go straight to this part of the and one thing I think Americans need to hear, because some of most of our audience is gonna be in Africa, but some Americans here locally sometimes people will judge the poor and the homeless as being cursed. And so you're being, it's your church, they saw this as a negative thing, right? That that you were taking becoming the father of all these people.

SPEAKER_00:

In fact, they were worried about uh my not only my life, but my children and my wife.

SPEAKER_01:

Sure.

SPEAKER_00:

Uh the direction that I was taking, uh, they thought that was very dangerous. And uh they advised me, the pastors came and prayed with me, and the elders and I told them, nobody can join me. Me, I will never ever work for money. I want now to serve the Lord. I will become the father to the fatherless, and I will feed them and I will continue, and I will never be the poor, and I'm ready for anything. And that one made them to be upset, and then they said, this man is insane, he's mad. Yeah, and uh he needs to be taken to a store to be checked. And me, I said, No, my wife told them my husband is not really uh mad, he he is he is if he is mad, is he is mad for Christ.

SPEAKER_01:

How did how did you I've been wanting to ask you this for the longest time. How did you know that that was God telling you to do that? What was it? What was it was it just a really strong feeling? Was it a vision? Like how did you know? Because this is so inspiring. And for me, as someone who wants to hear God's voice, I'd like to know how he spoke to you.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. Uh and you know, uh God speaks to man in different ways, approach, and uh for any vision that that comes from him, even since that when I said yes Lord, I'm going to serve you, that the moment now he also equipped me and uh within more knowledge and uh miracles also of healing people, miracles of uh of uh being able to talk and to to people to see something that they are not able to see. Yes. And uh uh, you know, like uh the world that uh oh I I I I was asleep and I had cried and they cried and cried for almost two weeks because we had lost three children who had died, and then we had twenty more who are hospitalized. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

And to give the audience some context, so where to catch them up to speed, this is a part of your story where you come home, you tell your family you're selling everything, and then you s you just start going to the slums and finding homeless orphan children, and you just start bringing them home. And so you're growing, and then some of your kids that you're bringing, and you're just you're doing this endlessly. And and this is hard for your kids, but you're bringing all these homeless children home to be their father and to give them food and shelter. But you're noticing, like in this case of the well, they're getting sick from water. And so you're praying to God for an answer for the water. So just so the audience knows what you're you're talking about.

SPEAKER_00:

Uh indeed, um uh it was really uh a great miracle. Uh when when when when we you know we came to this place and uh there was no trees, there were no bushes, it was uh you know sandy and uh the wind blowing, the soil and the dust, you could see it blowing. And uh that at the time we never had water, and that this water down the river where we are, it was somehow, but not only polluted somehow. And then the children got a decent tree and uh they were we are and uh yeah, three of them they died, and the 20 were hostilized. We took them to hostile and here they were no hostel. I had to drive 450 kilometers away to take them to hostel, very, very far. And therefore, yeah, it was another big, big, big temptation. Uh that uh now to question God, why did you bring me in this uh dry land here, no water? Of course, we left a laborate where uh it was a green land, very nice, raining throughout the year. But we left there because there was chaos. The people were fighting uh each other, tribes to try, and they were it was not peaceful. So that's why we ran and I bring brought all the 312 children by 30 times.

SPEAKER_01:

So I buy then by now you have 312 children that you have? Yes. And you're building houses for them, and you're spending all your money that you sold from your business to build this this land out here.

SPEAKER_00:

Everything, and then then even uh blowing uh workers' teachers, and because I opened a school for them, and uh buying the equipment that were needed, building houses here for them, dormitories. The we we lived in a very, very poor uh kind of condition, let me say that. And uh by by the way, we we we we had to go down. I had also myself, my wife to go down to that key level so that they could accept us. Yeah. And there because if we were to to remain up there, then we could not hug them and stay with us. So that was one of the things and uh the miracle after one another, after seven years, eight years, when now uh my account was going really down. I remember I went to check how much money we have in the bank, and uh to my surprise I found uh some money, and uh that money could take us for even three months, and then asked the bank, uh the bank uh clerk uh where has this money come from? Uh each for three times. And they said, no, this is not my money, right? I don't expect this money. So that was the first ever time to get money through money transfer, and uh it was way back, long time ago, 1993, 1994, that that time, and then we we we kept out even from that time in up to this day, our account has never ever uh gone to dry.

SPEAKER_01:

Wow, neither has your water. It just seems like the Lord has provided for you every step of the way. So you keep going in this way, miracle after miracle. I'm gonna beg the audience to please go watch the Molly movie or read his book, because the story is transformational. Um, and now why don't you tell the people watching how many children have you helped raise? How many, you know, campuses do we have, that type of thing.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, uh thank you. Over the last 36 years had gone, since 1989, we have been able to rescue over 40,000 children from the streets. They're giving them education right from grade one, grade four, uh, because of the kids when they come, uh they drop some of them, they drop schools when they are in grade four or grade six, others, grade, others they have never gone to school. And so, anyway, over 40,000 uh young people, boys and girls, they have gone through this program. And those who have only stayed here for about uh uh let's say six years now, six years, and they we have trained them. Uh they came when they are a little bigger. Uh they they were able to get trained on carpentry, on building and construction, on um on um motor mechanics and the apriculture, so many of the things that we do: cosmetics and uh uh beta therapy, sewing, tailoring, cloth designing, and all these things and the hospitality that we have in Yataguli College, uh, where we train them. So we have a big, big number at that time, and then we help them. Those are the the ones, but we have the little kids, those who are even born here.

SPEAKER_01:

Yes, you have one month-year-old babies because you have what's interesting is the kids. One year, two years, all the way to high school, and then many of your your kids have gone on. This is why it's the largest family in the world, because these children literally call you uh Daddy Mully. And they they just it's very objective. It's like, yeah, Daddy Molly says this, and they go and become lawyers and doctors, they've completed in global competitions, even in America, even in the yeah, we have uh uh one uh professor in uh oncology, yeah, and uh in Tennessee, and then we have also others in the most who have done also their PhD.

SPEAKER_00:

Uh, we have also another one who is doing uh final year also in university in Michigan and the uh in Canada as well. We have a quite a uh a big number. And the uh doctor of medicine and the nurses in Germany, because Germany we have about 27. And those 27, uh about 10 to 12, they are married already, and uh they are their life, uh, you know, and they serve. And one of the things that gives me a lot of joy is to be able to see that them having uh their own families.

SPEAKER_01:

Yes.

SPEAKER_00:

And uh most importantly, it's about the ethical uh way of life, the way they have been taught about the word of God here, and the counseling and the guidance and mentorship that they get throughout when they are here, and the prayers. They have never departed from there. They take the same, same thing added to the entire world in Africa, as well as in Europe and the Middle East, and the America, of course, and the and the and the and the yeah. Yeah, so there are so many countries in the industry.

SPEAKER_01:

And and so many of your children come back to live here and they come back to help build it. So just for a very quick like picture and again of plea, an emphasis to go watch this movie, is that there was a dry barren land and now there's trees. You have planted tens of millions of trees that have created a completely different ecosystem now. It rains here as we had to step in here for our interview because it's raining so much. There is water, and the water in the food isn't just for your family, you're giving it to the communities, you're you're taking in everybody. You never say no. And as this continues to grow, I I had a privilege of interviewing a number of your children yesterday or grown who who came in as young. My wife and I noticed there's a pattern. They say beforehand they were destitute, they were starving, they were desperate, and they'd given up hope. You brought them in. They were given love, food, spiritual nourishment. And they say above all, spiritual nourishment was the most important. That important. And there's this thing called forgiveness that is core to every single person. Can you talk to me a little bit about this pattern of helping rehabilitate these children into becoming these highly successful professionals?

SPEAKER_00:

Yes. Uh, one of the things is it starts with the love. Love is a very powerful tool uh that we can use in this world and uh be able also to listen to them. The humility also of myself going down and train them that if we want to aim to do successful, to live in peace with one another, it's by love, it's also ours have to humble ourselves to be able to understand also the problem, the needs of others. It's not about me, it's about the other one who has got a need and how you can help that other person. So that is what the alarming. And when I look at it, I see that uh a bright future for our nation, uh bright future for Africa, because these young people are really fiery because when they leave this place, they have something very special, and that is about knowing their rights, and knowing again that Jesus Christ is the savior, and that having knowing other people as people created by the image of God. So that one, and then working hard. We uh we train them. You have to work hard, you have to be honest, be obedient to God, and again extend that love to others. So that made really miracles and they made these young people to be uh to be uh uh dependent uh when the other people they depend. Even universities. There is a good record, track record of the money children family, young people who go to universal local universities abroad, their behavior, they are leaders, that you have trained them to become leaders. They they they are able to listen. Their minds are mature. By the time a child here is 14 years, oh, it's quite quite quite mature. They reason out anybody, they can talk about themselves. So that is the power uh giving to these young people, and I see it uh not only in Africa or here in Kenya, but uh globally, uh the the world be changed and that we don't look at ourselves. Let us look what we can do for others, but then when you say, ah, what they can do to me, no, what they can do for others.

SPEAKER_01:

Dr. Malene, thank you so much for being here. You the people who are watching this, we are a prayer-based community. What can we pray for to help you? Because obviously you have now you have campuses in and out of Kenya, you are expanding, your children are starting to take over operations. Those those wonderful eight children are each highly trained leaders who are taking on your legacy. But what can we pray for to help you?

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, thank you so much. Uh my prayer request is about the Mullish children family will continue to flourish, uh, to win uh many young people who are still in the streets, not only here in Kenya, but of our other countries in Africa, uh, that uh that love may not fail, not go down. But we will continue to have that love because that with that love, that love of God being you know inside us, we can try, but we fail. And so please uh uh those who are watching uh this wonderful interview, I would like to say that uh uh pray for us. Number two, uh, whenever you feel touched, uh you can also. I was a business man and uh many years ago, but I gave it all uh to save lives. But it is the benefit that I've gotten is more than any other pattern. And I count myself as one of the richest patterns in the whole world. Why? It is because I'm not working for money, I am not paid because everything that I get is only to for these children whom you can hear now singing and where we are going right now for the worship service. And so it it is you you please uh join us and in making my dreams a reality. Win the whole world globally. Help the the children, help the women also have been isolated and this beaten, and they're you know uh they need help. And we need also uh also support from you through press as well as financial support.

SPEAKER_01:

You recently had Elder Rasband visit last week from our church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint. And then you also went to the open house of the Nairobi temple. Was just sharing your your thoughts on those two experiences.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, um I think uh for me, uh not only thinking, but I really uh get it into my heart that uh they are full of uh uh love and appreciate very much the work of God that is going on here at Moolish Children's Family. And uh they also were able, I think it was about two or three weeks, when uh Apostle Rasband flew all the way from USA. Then we had a meeting in ROB, and our children they just arrived from Canada, they acquire, and we had a great time together, and they offered a big check, and that big check will help us mostly to buy books and uh text books as well, and they help the education sector because it's very expensive, and we have more than 9,000 children, those whom we are taking care of.

SPEAKER_01:

Yes, currently active.

SPEAKER_00:

Total total BMA in Kenya and uh in Tanzania. Yeah. So it needs really, it needs help, uh, prep uh uh support and also financial support, but also for those who give uh the toward uh that uh good cause. Uh I want to thank you so, so, so much. And uh may the Lord bless you and continue to really to uh to pray for us, and we shall be praying. And we really pray for all those people, even those whom we do not know. We always pray for you because we are doing not the work of the Mooli or Dr. Mooli. No, it is the work of the Lord 100%, and I believe so, and that's why we are growing the way we are going, because we are serving the mighty God and his people.