Benin flag

Djibouti

A Digital Beacon on the Red Sea — Ifriqah: A Digital Beacon on the Red Sea

Know Djibouti

Djibouti is a small country located in the Horn of Africa, bordered by Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia, with a coastline along the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.The capital city is Djibouti. Because of its strategic location near one of the world’s busiest shipping routes, Djibouti is an important center for international trade and military bases.The country’s population is mainly made up of Somali and Afar ethnic groups. French and Arabic are the official languages.Djibouti’s economy is based largely on port services, trade, transportation, and logistics, especially serving neighboring Ethiopia, which relies heavily on Djibouti’s ports for access to the sea.The country has a hot, dry climate with desert landscapes and volcanic features, including Lake Assal, one of the lowest points in Africa.Overall, Djibouti is known for its strategic location, port economy, and importance in regional trade and security.

Mission Section
COUNTRY SNAPSHOT
Nation at a Glance
1.1M
Population
Population Card
25.1
MEDIAN AGE
Population Card
~85%
MOBILE PENETRATION
Population Card
~600K
INTERNET USERS
Population Card
~94%
MUSLIM
~6%
Others
Urban youth engaged digitally
Missional Vision

Reaching the Gateway to the Horn of Africa

Djibouti is one of the most unreached nations on Earth — 94% Muslim with a deeply conservative religious culture. It is also a strategic hub for migrants and refugees from Somalia and Ethiopia. Traditional missions face immense challenges: there is a near-total lack of local believers and an absence of safe physical entry points for the Gospel.

Digital tools allow us to build relationships and share the Gospel in a safe, private, and culturally relevant way. A local Christian leader said: "The only way to reach a closed door is with an open screen."

Priority target groups:

  • The unreached Muslim majority (94%)
  • Immigrants & refugees from Somalia & Ethiopia
  • Youth open to new ideas
  • Low-literacy communities

"The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it." — John 1:5 NIV

Floating Table Layout
1
Contextualized Content (Culturally Sensitive Videos & Audio in Arabic, Somali & Afar)
2
WhatsApp Outreach (Private Encrypted Groups for Daily Devotionals & Seeker Questions)
3
Online Apologetics (Islamic-Perspective Christianity Q&A Content)
4
Youth Mobilization (Local Youth Digital Missionaries via Social Media)
5
Live Streams (Facebook & YouTube Q&A & Virtual Worship)
6
Audio Bible Distribution (Solar-Powered Audio Bibles for Low-Literacy Communities)
7
SD Card Distribution (Gospel Films & Audio Bibles for Rural Areas)
8
Targeted Social Media Ads (Facebook & Instagram Campaigns)
9
Online Training (Zoom-Based Missionary & Leader Training)
10
Digital Fellowships (Digital & In-Person Micro-Fellowships)
11
Gospel Film Production (Identity, Forgiveness & Healing Themes)
12
Radio Evangelism (Gospel Stories & Testimonies on Local Radio)
13
SMS Evangelism (Bible Verses & Online Event Invitations)
14
Follow-Up App (Custom App for Multi-Platform Follow-Up Conversations)
15
Collaborative Networking (16 African Nations Resource Sharing)
Mission Section
DIGITAL STRATEGY
15 Ministry Channels
Mission Section
GOALS AND OUTCOME
July 2026-June 2029
Responsive Table
ObjectiveYear 1Year 2Year 3Total
Gospel Exposures100,000150,000200,000450,000
Decisions for Christ5,0007,0008,00020,000
Youth Missionaries Trained25252575
Digital Fellowships Planted10101030
MONTORING & EVALUATION
Data-Driven Accountability

A digital dashboard tracks all key metrics: gospel exposures, decisions for Christ, and people in follow-up. Quarterly reviews drive continuous improvement. Ten short plus two documentary-style testimony videos are produced annually. The national CCC office provides oversight and alignment with national strategies.

TRANSFORMATIONAL STORIES
Lives Being Changed
Testimonial + Support
Safia Hassan
21 · Refugee Camp Resident, Djibouti City · Digital Seeker
Safia fled violence in Somalia as a teenager and arrived in Djibouti with her family. She had never encountered a Christian and had no safe way to ask questions about faith. A Somali-language audio story on a shared phone told of a woman who found peace after loss — it was the first gospel content she had ever heard. She connected with a digital missionary through a trusted contact. Over months of WhatsApp voice notes in Somali, Safia came to faith. She now hosts a quiet listening circle for three other women.
“The phone came to me in a place where no church could ever come. The voice was Somali, the story was mine, the peace was real.”
DONATE NOW
Join The Project
en_USEnglish