Congo woman opens home to dozens of children orphaned by war
BENI, Congo — Thirteen-year-old Gloria Saambili said her mother was cooking when rebels entered her home in the Congolese village of Mayi-Moya, killed her with an axe and took Gloria’s father and two brothers into the forest. The teen escaped.
“I think every day about my family … I am alone in the world,” Saambili said, through tears.
She is among hundreds of children in Congo’s northeastern Beni region who have lost family to attacks by Allied Democratic Forces rebels, who have killed more than 1,500 people since late 2014 in a region long-scarred by militia violence.
More than 100 of the orphaned children, including Saambili, have found themselves in the care of 65-year-old Marie Charline Mutsuva, whose humble hut has become well-known as a haven from the unrest.


