Linked With
Author and Editor
-
Tihomir Kukolja, born in Slavonska Pozega, Croatia in 1954. Studied, lived and worked in Yugoslavia, Croatia, United Kingdom, Australia and the US. Education in theology, communications, and radio journalism. Worked as a church pastor, media professional, radio producer and presenter, journalist, religious liberty activist, and reconciliation and leadership development activist. Lives in Houston TX, USA. Served as the Executive Director, Forum for Leadership and Reconciliation (Forum), and Director of Renewing Our Minds (ROM) initiative for many years. Founder and Director of Leadership Focus International. Loves photography, blogging and social media.
Webinar Notes, Christian Nationalism
Webinar Notes, Palestinian Christians
Recent Webinars
Christian Identity and Christian Nationalism
Overcoming Christian Nationalism
Facebook Tihomir Kukolja
- Follow Tihomir Kukolja on WordPress.com
My Blogs in Croatian: DUM SPIRO SPERO / DOK DIŠEM NADAM SE
Blog Stats
- 19,947 hits
-
Join 495 other subscribers
Category Archives: Africa
They Died Praying
On Thursday, 2nd April 2015, only a few days short of Easter, a group of Islamist terrorists from Somalia, with Kenyan connections, slaughtered 150 unsuspecting students. It seemed at first that the students at the Garissa University in Garissa, Kenya … Continue reading
Posted in Africa, Crime, Current Issues
Tagged Africa, Al-Shabaab, Beheading, Call for Solidarity, child abuse, Christian Union, Christians, Christians killed, Crime, Execution, FOCUS, Garissa University College, harrasment, Iraq, Kenya, Murder, Muslims, Open Doors, Pakistan, Persecuted Christians, Persecution, slavery, Syria, Terrorism
6 Comments
News from Nigeria
Not many know that while the North of Nigeria is plagued by terrorism, the country’s South is plagued in another way. In Nigeria beautiful, innocent children, as young as two years of age, are abused, tortured, abandoned, mutilated, killed by … Continue reading
Posted in Africa, Appeal, Current Issues, Faith
Tagged Africa, Appeal, Brazil, child abuse, Factory of Hope, Leo Santos, Nigeria, Saving Witch Children, superstition, Way to the Nations, Witch Children
1 Comment
Country Where Parents are Killing Their Own Children
Read also the interview released by The Huffington Post, April 17, 2014 If evaluated by the number of innocent children falsely branded as witches and killed by their superstitious parents and relatives, Nigeria is a country that has sunk deep … Continue reading
Posted in Africa, Faith, Human Dignity, Human Rights, Law and crime, Leadership, Nigeria, Podcast, Social Ethics, War Crimes
Tagged Abuse, Africa, Angola, Brazil, Caio Fabio, Cameron, Congo, Crime, cults, Human dignity, Human Rights, Leonardo Rocha, Nigeria, Occultism, paganism, prosperity gospel, superstition, The Child Rights Law, Way to the Nations, Witch Children, Witchcraft, Witches
6 Comments
Twenty Years After the Rwandan Genocide
The article “From Hell to a Happy Life: a Tutsi Survivor’s Escape from Genocide ”, published yesterday by Aljazeera America reminded me of my article “Political Challenges the Church Cannot Afford to Ignore” published by Spectrum fifteen years ago. In … Continue reading
Posted in Africa, Faith, Law and crime, Leadership, Rwanda, War Crimes, War Crimes
Tagged Adventists, Assiel Kabera, Crime, Elizaphan Ntakirutimana, Genocide, Hutu, Injustice, Massacre, Mugonero church, Pasteur Bizimunga, Rwanda, Spectrum, Tutsi, War Tribunal
Leave a comment
Saving Witch Children in Nigeria
In December 2009 I blogged for the first time about the shocking culture of crime in Nigeria, committed against the thousands of innocent children by their parents, family members, and self-appointed prophets, pastors and evangelists. As I am about to … Continue reading
Posted in Africa, Faith, Law and crime
Tagged Africa, animism, child abuse, CRARN, cults, deliverance ministries, demonism, evangelists, Nigeria, paganism, pastors, prophets, prosperity gospel, Stepping Stones, superstition, Way to the Nations, Witch Children
Leave a comment
Dangerous Legislation in Uganda
Four years ago, due to strong international pressure the Ugandan 2009 Anti-Gay Bill did not go through. Four years later, in December 2013 the bill was passed, slightly modified, and signed into law by the President of Uganda on 24th … Continue reading