About the Author
Meet Munenyashaishe Hove
Munenyashaishe Hove is a Zimbabwean-born, Botswana-based author, youth mentor, AI instructor, and prophetic thought leader whose life’s work sits at the intersection of technology, discipleship, and intergenerational healing. She is the author of Deborah’s Letters to Barak: 28 Conversations – A Young Man’s Rites of Passage to Manhood, a groundbreaking literary work and prophetic blueprint for restoring masculine identity, emotional integrity, and generational leadership among boys and young men.
With a background in Accounting and Finance, Munenyashaishe made a radical pivot into data science and artificial intelligence in 2021. She now serves as a data science and AI instructor and consultant, equipping African learners with technical tools for the future while remaining deeply committed to soul formation and kingdom legacy. She is the founder of Cave Adullam Initiatives, a discipleship and mentorship platform dedicated to raising a generation of healed men—prophets, priests, protectors, and builders who reflect God’s original design for manhood.
Her work is rooted in a deep conviction: that healing the boy is essential for strengthening the man—and in turn, healing families, nations, and the church. She draws from scripture, community experiences, and prophetic insight to address issues often silenced in African cultures: father wounds, emotional suppression, sexual trauma, accountability, spiritual identity, and legacy building.
As a speaker, trainer, and creative visionary, Munenyashaishe has facilitated workshops, youth development programs, and responsible AI training initiatives. Her debut book has gained national attention and has been featured across major platforms including Botswana Television, UB Radio, Yarona FM, Duma FM, and print media like The Voice, The Gazette, and Botswana Guardian.
Through her voice, pages, and prophetic pen, Munenyashaishe is calling a generation to rise—whole, healed, and ready to become all God intended. Her message is clear: “We must raise men who heal, not harm; who build, not break; who steward, not squander.”




This is such an incredible read. I really think the author should start cell meetings and have it explained and read to young men. Not only young men, but adult men and women. The book is such a blessing.