MaunBotswana
Christian majority (~79%, Protestant plurality) with significant African Initiated Church presence.
Localized version for English
Maun is a place where the evangelical deconstruction story is familiar — people leave, and the community reorganizes around the ones who stay. The wider Botswana religious landscape: Christian majority (~79%, Protestant plurality) with significant African Initiated Church presence.
In a place the size of Maun, the religious community is often the community. Leaving it means losing the main social infrastructure, and the rebuild usually involves finding support outside town — online groups, occasional trips to the nearest city, and the slow construction of a new social world.
Maun ranks near the top of Botswana by population. That means more anonymity, more diversity, and more room to build a life outside the religious container you came from.
Around Maun, the cost of leaving falls hardest inside the family rather than in public life. The community may talk, but the real weight is at the dinner table, the holiday gathering, the moment someone asks the kids if they said their prayers.
Elder X has been through the religious exit himself — the family rupture, the guilt that would not stop, the psych wards, the isolation of being the person nobody in your family understands anymore. If you are in Maun and that description lands, reach out. Not therapy. Personal advice from someone who made it to the other side.
Whatever tradition you came out of, the rebuild follows a pattern. First you leave. Then you grieve. Then you figure out who you are without the container that used to hold your identity. Then — slowly, with setbacks — you build something new. Maun is where that sequence is playing out for you right now. Rage 2 Rebuild exists because the rebuild is the part nobody talks about, and the part that matters most.