It Seemed like an Impossibility

In 2013, Rob Perry and his ministry colleagues at The Peoples Church in Toronto began praying about how to support forcibly displaced people. Today they are fulfilling that vision through IAFR Canada, an organization with over a dozen staff leading partnerships in six countries along the refugee highway. God used an RHPNA event to spark the connections that became IAFR Canada. Here’s how it happened...

Tom Albinson and Tim Barnes of IAFR - US discuss ministry strategies with Rob Perry, Norman Musewe and Insaf Safou. Rob met Tom and Tim at the RHPNA Roundtable in 2016 and helped start IAFR Canada with their guidance and encouragement.

Tom Albinson and Tim Barnes of IAFR - US discuss ministry strategies with Rob Perry, Norman Musewe and Insaf Safou. Rob met Tom and Tim at the RHPNA Roundtable in 2016 and helped start IAFR Canada with their guidance and encouragement.

“At the beginning, we were really focused on camps,” Rob says. “We had backgrounds in urban ministry and church planting. We were praying about maybe helping start churches or some kind of prayer tent in refugee camps. But we didn’t have any idea how one even accesses those places. It seemed like an impossibility. We were asking, ‘Where would the money come from? What would it look like? What’s God’s timing?’”

In early 2016, the group took an initial step much closer to home than a distant camp. They formed a refugee housing ministry in Toronto called People’s House. That summer, Rob and several others working at the house attended the RHPNA Roundtable. They met Tom Albinson, one of the early visionaries of the RHP, and founder of the International Association for Refugees.

“Here we had this guy talking about partnering with churches in refugee camps, partnering with Christian organizations--basically what we’d all been praying about for three years--without even realizing it,” says Rob. “We discovered an organization that we didn’t know existed, but seemed to resonate very strongly in our hearts.”

Over the next year, Rob and his team did vision trips and meetings with Tom and others from IAFR. One was a trip to Zdaleka refugee camp in Malawi, where Rob learned there were already 60 indigenous churches providing care to the community. It was there the vision for IAFR Canada began to take shape.

Today IAFR Canada — a sister entity to IAFR U.S. — consists of members of the original prayer group of 2013, plus others who’ve joined the team’s vision. It operates in partnership with The Peoples Church. The team works with organizations and churches who are supporting displaced people in Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq, Uganda, Malawi, and Canada.

“IAFR Canada would definitely not exist in its current form if we hadn’t met Tom and his team at the RHPNA Roundtable in 2016,” says Rob. “I’m sure God would have found a way to lead us where he wanted us to go, but it would have looked very different...God was amazing in bringing us an incredible team, the right people at the right time.”

Prayerfully connecting with each other for the good of people who are forcibly displaced is what the RHPNA does. Help us create more connections.