Support UM News at General Conference: Your gift ensures that you and other visitors receive the latest updates, in-depth analysis, and diverse perspectives from General Conference.

Guest house to provide lodging, jobs

House of Hope, a United Methodist missionary guest house, will provide jobs and generate income for the denomination’s mission work.

The guest house was inaugurated March 31by Bishop Benjamin Boni and government representatives.

The facility, which serves as hotel, will be managed by Groupe Iroko. Ignace Meney, director of Groupe Iroko, said the guest house will reduce unemployment and improve living conditions for 24 families employed there.

“Among them, 33 percent are girls, 40 percent will have their first job, 15 percent were unemployed, and 20 percent will change employment status (get better jobs),” he noted.

Boni said the church and state “are working on the same subject: the human holistic development." He encouraged districts and local churches to follow the example of this initiative by finding new and sustainable ways of raising funds to support evangelism.

Church is helping tourism

Georges Yao Bi, a representative of the Ministry of Tourism, promised the ministry’s support of the hotel operations since the Côte d’Ivoire United Methodist Church is helping the government in its mission.

“Your guest house is the pride of tourism in Côte d’Ivoire,” he said. Groupe Iroko operates several facilities covering all segments of the hotel market, ranging from budget to luxury hotels.

Louis Aboua, a lay leader in the Côte d’Ivoire United Methodist Church, said the acquisition of this former hotel fit into the Seventh Annual Conference session’s theme: "Every church, a project." At the 2012 conference session, members decided every local church and organization should focus on investment projects to support its mission work.

He invited the laity to promote the lodging in their churches, their work places and around them.

Mathurin Adjrabé, president of the conference board of finance and administration, said the building was purchased and renovated with the support of a local bank, ECOBANK; other local donations and through The Advance, a voluntary giving program of The United Methodist
Church.

Built on three levels, the building has a capacity of 24 rooms with 70 beds. Features include a panoramic restaurant, a banquet hall for 300 people, three meeting rooms, a shuttle, and a generator.

Donate to Missionary Transit Housing Infrastructure Advance #3021944.

Broune is the communicator for The United Methodist Church in Côte d’Ivoire.

News media contact : Vicki Brown at newsdesk@umcom.org or 615-742-5400.


Like what you're reading? Support the ministry of UM News! Your support ensures the latest denominational news, dynamic stories and informative articles will continue to connect our global community. Make a tax-deductible donation at ResourceUMC.org/GiveUMCom.

Sign up for our newsletter!

Subscribe Now
Evangelism
Danny Dube (left), a regular member of Morning Service in Nyanyadzi, Zimbabwe, talks with the Rev. Godfrey Gaga, Nyanyadzi Circuit pastor-in-charge, after a funeral. The 7 a.m. church service has transformed Dube, who had been known in the community for drinking and causing disturbances. “The circuit is meeting people where they are, offering a safe space for transformation and showing that the church is a place of healing rather than judgment,” says Bishop Gift K. Machinga. Photo by Kudzai Chingwe, UM News.

'Morning Service' revives farming community

From humble beginnings three years ago, a church service in Nyanyadzi, Zimbabwe, is sparking a quiet revolution by meeting struggling people where they are.
Disaster Relief
Beneficiaries of a United Methodist-sponsored nutrition program gather at Dzaleka Refugee Camp in Dowa District, Malawi. The camp is home to an estimated 57,000 refugees. The church initiative provides a monthly clinic that offers supplementary feeding programs for those at the camp most at risk of malnutrition. Photo by Francis Nkhoma, UM News.

Church provides food, hope at Malawi refugee camp

Through the Dzaleka Refugee Camp Nutrition Program, United Methodists offer vital health and nutrition services to vulnerable women and children.
Mission and Ministry
Elie Etako Wembo, coordinator of the Yambasu Agriculture Initiative in the East Congo Episcopal Area, and Omanga Sebastien, a zoo technician, inspect a pig with an injured ear at a United Methodist farm funded by the initiative near Kindu, Congo. The United Methodist Board of Global Ministries program has financed the construction of two buildings for pig farming, which can accommodate up to 300 animals. Photo by Chadrack Tambwe Londe, UM News.

Yambasu farm fosters hope in Congo

A mixed-use farm funded through the Yambasu Agriculture Initiative strengthens local food security, creates jobs and generates sustainable income for the community and The United Methodist Church in eastern Congo.

United Methodist Communications is an agency of The United Methodist Church

©2025 United Methodist Communications. All Rights Reserved