In a Ugandan Refugee Camp, Baking Bread to Heal and Feed  

From August 11–17, the net proceeds from the sale of our special large Brown-Sugar Shortbread Cookie will benefit the Adamâ Foundation and their bakery. 

“I’m so grateful for the work of Adamâ,” said Florence Kayesu. “They came at a time I needed them most. I was almost giving up because of the conditions in Oruchinga.” 

Located near the Oruchinga Settlement Camp in southwest Uganda, Adamâ Bakery serves more than 9,000 refugees from East Africa. Its goals are threefold: empower refugees — especially women — with skills to earn a livelihood. Create a focal point for the community. And feed the camp’s most vulnerable residents, the children. 

December 2024, Friday giving at Adamâ Foundation

In 2022, Jeffrey Hamelman and Mitch Stamm were brought in to train the bakers, a connection that inspired Macrina’s annual support. “When the refugees arrive, they are given four eucalyptus poles and a tarp,” says Jeffrey. Mitch adds, “They’ve been stripped of everything except their dignity.” 

The bakery welcomes twenty-four bakers each day. They not only earn a wage but also set aside part of the day’s bread for the camp’s children. “Three-fourths of the bakers are women,” notes Jeffrey. 

This past February, with help from Macrina and many others, Adamâ finished a dedicated bakery building. The airy structure holds a full production line, cooling racks, and room for a small storefront that will one day help the bakery pay its own way. Running water, still rare in the settlement, now reaches the dough room and sanitation sinks. In June, a high-capacity diesel generator arrived to bridge frequent power outages, keeping the ovens hot as demand grows. 

June 2025, Adamâ Foundation

Since late 2024, several international NGOs have left Oruchinga after deep cuts in foreign aid. Food deliveries fell sharply, and hunger worsened. Adamâ cannot replace the lost aid, but it has launched Adamâ Aid, a program that each month supplies fifty of the most vulnerable families with twenty kilos of corn flour (milled on-site) and five kilos of beans — enough to keep children nourished between bread distributions.  

“We know the needs are endless, but even small contributions benefit a large number of people,” says Scott France, president and co-owner of Macrina Bakery. “We made a significant contribution last year and we hope to top that this year. The money goes directly to the bakery and it makes an incredible impact on the bakers’ lives.”