
How a Small Investment Is Helping Farm Families Thrive
In parts of Northwest Africa, farming is survival. For many families, each harvest determines whether there will be enough food to last the year, enough seed to plant again, or enough income to avoid falling deeper into debt.
One farm family had lived in that uncertainty for years. Like many others, they faced a painful cycle in which each season brought pressure instead of security. When harvests were weak, borrowing often seemed like the only option, yet those arrangements often made the next season even harder. It was difficult to get ahead when so much energy went into simply surviving.
Through the Northwest Africa agriculture project, that pattern began to change. What may seem like a small investment—$100 for seed and fertilizer—became a turning point. For the first time, this family not only had food to last through the year but also seed saved for the next planting season. That kind of stability changes what a family can imagine for the future.
How a $100 Investment Creates Lasting Impact
One of the remarkable aspects of this project is how much impact can begin with a modest investment. A $100 investment can help a farmer produce enough to feed, on average, twelve people for a year while also preserving seed for future crops.
That is a step toward sustainability. And when that kind of support reaches thousands of families, the impact multiplies. What begins in one field can strengthen households, benefit communities, and help break long-standing cycles of scarcity.
Since 2023, SOM International has provided seed and fertilizer to 20,000 families, feeding 240,000 people over a year and creating self-sustainability.
How Practical Help Opens Doors for Gospel Hope
Yet the story does not end with improved harvests. As communities experience this kind of generosity, relationships are growing. Trust is deepening. In places where Christian witness may once have been misunderstood, practical compassion is helping open new doors.
Local leaders are asking questions. Conversations about faith are happening. People are seeing Christian love expressed not only in words, but in tangible care for others. This is why the project reaches beyond agriculture. It reflects a vision of ministry that cares for both physical needs and spiritual transformation.
When the Land Flourishes
Again and again, we see the same truth: when people encounter practical help offered in the name of Christ, hearts often become open in new ways.
What is happening through this agriculture project is building trust, creating opportunity, and bearing fruit in ways that reach beyond the fields.
Sometimes transformation begins with something as simple as seed placed in the ground. And sometimes, through God’s provision, that seed bears fruit in both the land and the human heart.



