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Central African Republic

Pôlɛ: A Digital Path to Peace in CAR· July 2024 – June 2029

Know Central African Republic

The Central African Republic is a landlocked country located in the heart of Africa. Its capital city is Bangui. The country is rich in natural resources such as diamonds, gold, and timber, but it has faced long periods of political instability and conflict. Most of the population depends on agriculture for their livelihood. The official languages are French and Sango. Despite its challenges, the Central African Republic has diverse wildlife and natural beauty, including forests and national parks.

Mission Section
COUNTRY SNAPSHOT
Nation at a Glance
6.1M
Population
Population Card
17.6
MEDIAN AGE
Population Card
45%
MOBILE PENETRATION
Population Card
1.2M
INTERNET USERS
Population Card
~80%
CHRISTIAN
~15%
MUSLIM
Urban youth engaged digitally
Missional Vision

Bringing Peace to CAR's Unreached

Decades of conflict have left CAR’s population — especially women and children — deeply traumatized and displaced. While a Christian majority exists on paper, geographic remoteness and ongoing insecurity leave vast communities functionally unreached. The traditional loophole is clear: it is simply unsafe to send a person into many of these zones. But a story can travel anywhere.

The ADD strategy deploys solar-powered audio kits, encrypted WhatsApp circles, and Sango-language trauma-informed content to reach displaced populations — providing spiritual healing where physical presence is impossible.

Priority target groups:

  • Displaced populations, especially traumatized women and children
  • Functionally unreached communities in remote, insecure zones
  • Sango-speaking trauma survivors

"To proclaim good news to the poor... to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives." — Isaiah 61:1 NIV

Floating Table Layout
1
Displacement-Centered Digital Evangelism (100 Solar Audio Kits, IDP Camps)
2
Youth Content & Storytelling Teams (Sango, French & Gbaya)
3
Women's Hope Circles & Trauma Discipleship (30 WhatsApp Bible Groups)
4
Remote House Church Multiplication (50 Digital Shepherds)
5
Radio Evangelism (Bluetooth & WhatsApp Distribution)
6
Social Media Campaigns (Facebook & Instagram, Urban Youth)
7
Follow-Up App (WhatsApp & Messenger Integration)
8
Online Training via Zoom
9
Tablet Evangelism (Pre-loaded Evangelistic Videos)
10
Digital Fellowships (Micro-Fellowships, Trained Leaders)
11
Gospel Film Production (Identity, Forgiveness & Healing)
12
Audio Devotionals (Low-Literacy Audiences)
13
Solar Projectors for Film Screenings
14
Trauma Care Content (Displaced & Violence-Affected Populations)
15
Collaborative Networking (16 African Nations)
Mission Section
DIGITAL STRATEGY
15 Ministry Channels
Mission Section
GOALS AND OUTCOME
July 2024-June 2029
Responsive Table
ObjectiveYear 1Year 2Year 3Total
Gospel Exposures150,000200,000250,000600,000
Decisions for Christ15,00025,00030,00070,000
Youth Missionaries Trained303535100
Solar Audio Kits Deployed100100+
Digital Fellowships Planted15152050
MONTORING & EVALUATION
Data-Driven Accountability

A secure digital dashboard tracks all key metrics — gospel exposures, decisions for Christ, and follow-up engagement — in real time. Security protocols are built into all data collection methods given the conflict context. Quarterly reviews drive continuous improvement, and ten short plus two documentary-style testimony videos are produced annually. All activities are assessed by the national CCC office.

TRANSFORMATIONAL STORIES
Lives Being Changed
Testimonial + Support
Rosalie Nzinga
28 • Displaced Mother, IDP Camp Near Bangui • Women’s Circle Leader
Rosalie fled her village during an attack that killed her husband and destroyed her home. In the displacement camp, she received a solar audio kit loaded with Sango-language Bible stories. “I listened every night under my sleeping cloth because I did not want the children to hear me cry,” she says. A digital missionary connected with her through a voice note, then invited her into a WhatsApp women’s circle. Rosalie began speaking into her phone — in Sango — about grief, anger, and slowly, about forgiveness. By month three, she was helping lead her own listening group for six other women in the camp.
“I could not read the Bible. But when I heard it in Sango, in a voice like my mother’s, I knew God was speaking to me.” Rosalie’s circle has grown to eleven women and continues to meet weekly via audio voice notes.
TRANSFORMATIONAL STORIES
Lives Being Changed