
Africa Digital Discipleship Project · July 2024 – June 2029

Angola is a vast, resource-rich nation home to around 36 million people with a strikingly young median age of just 17. The Ovimbundu, Mbundu, and Bakongo are the dominant ethnic groups, united by Portuguese while each preserving their own tongue and traditions. It is the world’s second-largest Portuguese-speaking country, and the seventh-largest nation in Africa at 1,246,700 km².
Shaped by centuries of colonisation and a devastating 27-year civil war that ended in 2002, Angolans are known for their resilience, warmth, and a rich musical culture that gave the world Semba — the cultural ancestor of Brazilian Samba — and Kizomba.
Cultural Gateway: Music and storytelling are powerful Gospel bridges in Angola. The ADD strategy leverages spoken-word, audio drama, and music-driven digital content as primary outreach channels, rooted in Angola’s rich oral culture.
Though 93% identify as Christian, deep spiritual wounds persist — generations shaped by war trauma, pervasive syncretism with animist traditions, and a digitising youth population largely unsupported by existing churches.
