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What is The Kingdom Relationship Network?

We are a non-profit platform with a noble mission to eradicate child forced labor by implementing sustainable solutions while hurting and empowering families to cultivate healthy, loving relationships rooted in God's kingdom principles.

Albertina Nyantee's Story
The Founder and Executive Director of Kingdom Relationship Network
Albertina Nyantee was born into a family with limited resources in Yekepa, Nimba County. Four months after Albertina’s birth, her father got a scholarship through the Catholic Archdiocese to study in the United States, and the family’s financial struggle began. Her mother rented a one-bedroom apartment and obtained scholarships for Albertina and her sister to attend Catholic schools in exchange for cleaning the church every Saturday.

 

The Catholic nuns loved Albertina for her dedicated service and took her on mission trips to nearby villages to provide food, and clothes, and preach the gospel to the poor. She was given the responsibility of setting up the altar for the priest before mass, and she became the choir leader for the children’s mass. However, her mother’s financial struggles led her to give away some of her children to relatives, and Albertina was mistreated severely. Albertina was sent to Monrovia to live with another relative to have a father figure and a better education. However, she ended up being a maid for the relative’s children. Because of the brutal abuses, Albertina went through, she always said to herself that if she ever becomes successful, she will rescue children from similar situations.

At 16, her foster relative kicked her out, and she moved in with her mom in a remote neighborhood. She dropped out of school for a year and later enrolled in a school she did not like. , Albertina came back to her former city to pick up the rest of her belongings and encountered a young girl going through the same treatment she went through

That little girl was Albertina’s first rescued child victim.. She rescued the girl, and they traveled to Monrovia together, where Albertina turned her over to another family member to live with and she stayed there for a couple of years. Later, she migrated to the United States to live with some of her relatives.


During the civil war, Albertina stayed with her sister and her husband, and they traveled through rebel territories. At checkpoints, rebel commanders wanted her to stay with them as the commander’s lover, but God always allowed her to go free. They passed through dead bodies, crossed rivers, and slept in the forest.

After the war, Albertina returned to Monrovia and worked as a volunteer for a nonprofit organization called SELF for a while. She later fled to Sierra Leone as a refugee after a couple of years, rebels attacked Sierra Leone and she was forced to flee again to Conakry Guinea as another refugee. She lived In Guinea before migrating to the United States. She continued to pursue her passion for rescuing enslaved children by starting her own organization called the “Giant of Hope Foundation” in 2014 where she caters to orphans and less fortunate children.

It was then that Albertina went through some tough times while looking for her true love. She had two kids before reconnected with her childhood boyfriend she had dating at the age of 14. They got married in 2005, and are now doing very well as a blended family with four kids – all four boys.

Despite the many challenges and hardships that Albertina faced growing up, she remained resilient and determined to make a difference in the lives of others. Her experiences have inspired her to dedicate her life to helping those in need, and she has become a shining example of the power of perseverance and the human spirit.

To learn more information about our services including donating, please visit the website at https://kingdomrelationshipnetwork.org

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