Angie’s Testimony

Hi Vuku family, this is Angie. I'm your Vuku sister from Vancouver. I just wanted to say that I am so excited for you guys to have your retreat. I'm dressed up today just because I have an appointment that I'm going to soon, but I just wanted to reach out and say you're in such good hands with Jung and Helen. They are amazing people doing God's work.

Vuku is amazing. We're just finishing our last weeks here and now trying to share this journey. I come from a background where I'm very practical and skeptical. I have a lot of questions — "Why? Why? Why?" I'm sure you will go through that too on your journey.

Vuku is really about God and love. You get a chance to write your love story with God. It's beautiful. The Vuku process identifies what we go through in our spiritual walk. Each week, something new comes up. This journey helped me understand my relationship with God. Tears, anger, heartbreak — all of it came out.

It’s emotional, but it brings change. You learn to trust and break down before God. The moment my walls came down was when I realized that God has never abandoned me. He’s always been there, waiting for us to recognize His love that’s always been present.

With God, everything will be OK. Vuku is such an amazing community — a foundation of love. Now we have this international family spreading God’s love. I might mess up Scripture, but Jesus says, “Don’t be afraid, just believe.” (Mark 5:36)

Continue your journey. When you find that joy, you’ll know everything will be OK. I love you all and hope to meet you one day. Bye!



Novulikaya’s Testimony

Good morning, everyone. I’m Novulikaya.

I’ve been doing Vuku since 2023. And every day, there are new changes in my life. I’m getting restored every day — in my family, in my community, everywhere I go. I’m not afraid of anything. I can talk to anyone. I can tell anyone about Jesus Christ. And now I’m at a level where I want to help the whole world know how to be precious to Jesus.

To me, being precious to Jesus means getting back your identity. It means being restored. It means asking yourself every day, “Lord, where can I go?” It means asking, “Lord, show me someone who needs love.”

In our culture and community, we face many challenges. Poverty. Broken relationships. Even though there are many churches in our areas, there’s still no solution. That made me question: why do we have so many churches, but so many bad things still happen?

Then I found the answer through Vuku. People don’t need a church building — they need love. They don’t need songs or dancing. People come to church and dance from 10 to 11. But when the Word is shared, they get bored. They’re not happy. They want to go home. Even though they are in church, there’s no real joy.

Doing Vuku gave me an answer to all of that. I did it in my church, in my community, with my family. I’ve seen many changes in all of them.

Being a Vuku leader taught me that leadership is not about position. It’s about serving people. Loving people. Being there for people. That’s leadership.

So I’m no longer doing Vuku just once and leaving the person. I follow up. I walk with them in the journey. Because I’ve realized Vuku is a long journey. It’s a journey of healing. And you don’t finish it in one day. You can’t do it alone. You need to walk with others until the end of your days.

That’s what I’ve learned from Vuku.