2002, at the Nyarugusu refugee camp in Tanzania.

As horrific stories of rape, dismemberment and slaughter shook the founder of TWNAF to his core, one thing became inescapably clear.

There had to be a deeper catalyst for the brokenness than what initially met the eye.

15 years of conversations with leaders around the world,
hundreds of hours of research and thousands of meetings later,
WE ARE CONVINCED
fatherlessness wasn’t just one of the issues facing those refugees.

FATHERLESSNESS IS THE ISSUE

We believe there is a solution

Founded on common sense and principles for healthy family, The World Needs A Father is about training communities of men to understand the value of their roles as fathers, and giving them the tools to train other men around them, so that as heaven splashes down in their home, the ripples flow through their community.

Our vision

We want to heal the world through transformed communities, built on strong, healthy families that experience heaven at home.

Our mission

We empower fathers and mothers around the world to bring heaven home through trainings, mentoring, and a global network of people who are passionate about eradicating the scourge of fatherlessness.

Our model

TWNAF is a decentralised movement, which means that every country and individual shares ownership and leadership for the movement. We have international mentorship and accountability structures, but no global leadership hierarchy or central headquarters — each country develops their own coordination team and is responsible for building the movement in their country.

Our value proposition

The current research indicates that homes with positively involved fathers have a wide-ranging positive effect, from mental and emotion health to social engagement, productivity and even physical health. Our global model of training, mentorship and community, in collaboration with entities from all sectors, has an established record of positive transformation in countries around the world.

“Virtually every major social pathology has been linked to fatherlessness.”

Stephen Baskerville