Susu

  • Pre-Entry
  • Pre-Evangelism
  • Evangelism
  • Discipleship
  • Phase-Out
  • Completed

About the People

Numbering nearly a million people, the Susu are primarily farmers. Rice and millet are their two principal crops. They also grow mangoes, pineapples and coconuts. Children are expected to help with a large amount of the work.

The Susu are descendants of the thirteenth-century Mali Empire. They moved to Guinea after 1725 when the Fulani attempted to dominate them and managed to convert them to Islam. Today, many Susu are traders and experts in leather and metal crafts. They also fish and mine salt.

Susu houses are generally quite large to accommodate extended families. They are built of either mud or cement blocks, depending on what’s available. In rural areas, roofs are usually still made of thatch. Most cooking is done over open fires.

Extended family is important to the Susu. Polygamy is allowed under Islamic law, but only some can afford to practice it. Although the Susu value good relationships, they tend to squabble with their neighbors, especially over money or property. Therefore, each village usually has a “wise man” and an elected or appointed leader to help resolve conflicts.

Friday meetings at the mosques are important social events for most Susu. The Susu are 85 percent Muslim, and Islam dominates their religious culture and practices. The New Testament is available in their language.

About the Project

By God’s grace, the Susu Project is now in the phase-out stage of project implementation. Despite multiple challenges, including threats from jihadis, the Ebola outbreak, constant bouts with malaria, bandits on the roads at night, power outages, regular break-ins and the constant threat of low-level physical assault, the Susu Project team has accomplished its main goals.

A thriving mother church has been established in Fria, with members coming from mainly Muslim or animist backgrounds. The church in Fria is very active in the city, helping those in need, performing deliverance ministry and outreach. From this mother church, a thriving school has been established in partnership with the General Conference. Almost 800 students attend. The students are overwhelmingly Muslim, but the school is run unashamedly as a Seventh-day Adventist educational institution according to principles found in the Bible and the SOP. Each year, students are baptized through the faithful witness of the teachers and staff. The school is financially self-sufficient–a minor miracle in Guinea, and has one of the highest high-school diploma pass rates of any school in the country.

Parallel to the school, five daughter congregations have been planted among Susu Muslims and animists in neighboring towns. These daughter congregations are likewise active in witnessing and outreach. One has built and now operates a mission school—entirely through its own financial resources. A team of four Bible workers serves under the direction of the pastor of the Fria SDA Church, and those Bible workers are paid through the incomes generated by the school.

The Susu Project is a testimony to the hard work, dedication and sheer grit of a wide number of AFM missionaries, including Dr. Marc and Sister Cathy Coleman and the Coker family. As part of AFM’s regular project implementation plan, the Cokers were stationed in the neighboring country of Sierra Leone and remained there through mid-2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic. They continue to provide oversight for the Susu Project, coaching the national leaders of the Susu Project, including the pastor and the Bible workers, in the ongoing indigenous sharing of the gospel and leadership of the schools and congregations. It is a necessary part of project implementation for career missionary families to move away from their project for the national leadership to have the time and space to mature into their new roles.

AFM anticipates that this national leadership coaching will last through mid-2023, by which time the entire Susu Project will be handed over to the administration of the Guinea Adventist Mission.

Meanwhile, the Cokers are focusing on pioneering a new ministry among the unreached Kono of Sierra Leone. For information on that project, please go to the Kono Project webpage. The Cokers will manage all donations to both the Susu and Kono projects as a single project fund as they oversee the final phase-out of the Susu Project and the initial implementation of the Kono Project. Thank you to all of AFM’s donors who have sacrificially stood by the Susu Project for many years. Your faithful prayers and sacrificial giving have made it possible for the gospel to take root among the previously unreached Susu People. Thank you so much!

People-Group Facts

  • Population: 1 million
  • Language: Susu
  • Religion: Islam

Frontier Stories

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It all began on June 30, 2007, when I asked my girlfriend Marguerite to marry me.

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