About us

About Us

Harmony House (CWC), is a christian charity organization based in Kampala, Central Region. We are dedicated to making a positive impact in the lives of those in need. With a passion for helping others, we strive to create a harmonious community where everyone has access to basic necessities and opportunities for a better future.

Harmony House (CWC) is a charity organization operating currently in Uganda, with offices located after Kalagi Roundabout in Mukono district, . Our orphanage is located in Mukono district, Kalagi town, Nakanyonyi Village about 25 miles from the capital city, Kampala.

Harmony House (CWC) began in 2006 as a small outreach ministry operating in both Kampala town and Mukono town. It was founded by the late Emmanuel MacMillan Kitumba. Emmanuel had a passion for helping the needy in his community. From childhood, he dreamed that when he was financially able to, he would go back and make his community a better place.

His parents, Pastor Sam Sekirime and Mrs. Robina Sekirime helped nurture Emmanuel’s dream by bringing him up in the ways of the Lord. As the Scripture says: “Train up a child in the way he should go, that when he or she is grown, they will not depart from it” Proverbs: 22:6. With this strong foundation in Emmanuel’s life, it was only to be expected that his life would bear much good fruit.

In 2008, after Emmanuel completed his theological course under the sponsorship of Mr. Andrew McMillan, he decided to ask his sponsor, Mr. McMillan, on how he could repay his gratitude towards him. He had already adopted Mr. McMillan’s surname. Mr. McMillan said, “Do to others what has been done to you”. This was a perfect confirmation of what the Lord had placed for so long within Emmanuel’s heart.

The Late Emmanuel opened the Foundation called Harmony House (CWC) in 2012, and in 2014, the foundation was officially registered as a Community Based Organization (CBO) number 178298 and in 2019, LUF was officially recognized as An Indigenous NGO by the government of Uganda with NGO Registration Number INDR141921543NB and Permit Number INDP0001543NB

As of now, Harmony House (CWC) is trying to address major issues affecting our Ugandan communities at large. These include but not limited:

  • Under-age marriages and teenage pregnancies
  • Disabled & Orphan Children
  • Domestic violence
  • HIV/AIDS pandemic
  • Child abuse.
  • School dropouts.

What We Do

We create events aiming to pear to the voice for children and gather for support.
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Our Objective

The major objective of the charity organization/ Foundation is to Empower the next generation through provision of quality education and mentorship, providing essential needs to the underprivileged children, Widows, elderly people, Teenage mothers, school dropout and those at risk of dropping out of school . We aim to provide these services for the underprivileged children in the children’s home (Harmony House CWC Orphanage) and around the community, providing food to the Elderly people, Vocational skilling the widows, teenage mothers, school dropouts and providing counselling & providing sponsorships for those at risk of dropping out of school.

In the early period, the Foundation carried out the following activities to support and achieve this objective:

  • Raising awareness in the community
  • Elderly home visiting
  • Renting a home for the orphans which accommodates 30 children 17 boys and 13 girls between the age of 2 years- 17 years currently and providing them with the basic needs of life.
  • Providing Quality education to the Underprivileged children in the Orphanage and around the community through sponsorships.
  • Vocational skilling of Widows, Teenage mothers, and school dropouts.
  • Helping disabled people more especially children.
  • Monitoring families with children at risk.
  • Resource mobilization.

Challenges we Face

Over the past decade, the number of orphans and vulnerable children living in Uganda has been escalating at an alarming rate. In 2004, the number of orphans was estimated to be 1.8 million; in 2009 that number had grown to nearly 2.6 million. Over one million of those children have lost their parents to HIV/AIDS-related complications and suffer the following problems that challenged us to start up a stretching hand to the orphans, vulnerable and needy children in Uganda:

Extreme Poverty:

Many of these children are deprived of their basic needs due to high levels of poverty. Nearly half of the population lives below the poverty line, out of which 19% are children. Uganda’s rural areas in particular struggle with a very high poverty rate

Caretaking:

After their parents die or become disabled by illness, orphans and vulnerable children as young as five years old become both mother and father to their younger siblings. Those whose parents suffer from HIV/AIDS face an additional burden of care as complications develop and worsen over time. Children are forced to drop out of school as they try and provide necessities for their siblings.

Unfair wages:

Orphans have to find work wherever they can due to their lack of education and resources: laboring in fields, tending cattle, carrying water, or other back-breaking tasks. When they can find work, orphans are often paid unfair wages because they have no alternative but to accept whatever is given. When there is no work, they must beg for or steal food to ward off starvation. Survival becomes a daily struggle.

Exploitation:

Living in extreme poverty without the support of their parents, orphans are vulnerable to additional kinds of exploitation. Neighbors and occasionally relatives can take advantage of them because they know that there is no longer an adult to enforce the children’s property rights. Orphans are also vulnerable to physical abuse. These children are beaten and sometimes mutilated after they are driven by hunger to steal small amounts of food to eat. Girls are subject to sexual exploitation when they face the hard choice of selling their bodies for food or watching their families go hungry.

Isolation:

Many of these children live in communities where there are widespread misconceptions about the causes of HIV/AIDS. After their parents die from HIV/AIDS-related complications, they are shunned by neighbors and community members for fear of catching the disease. Orphans find themselves isolated within their communities, surrounded by those who are unwilling or unable to reach out to them.

It was while facing these serious issues that Harmony House CWC was formed.