Activism Kisyombe began her activism by volunteering with the
Irish Refugee Council where she met café owner and
Irish Examiner food columnist Michelle Darmody with whom she founded Our Table, initially catering events at venues such as the
Irish Museum of Modern Art. They held a pop-up café in the
Project Arts Centre in 2016, first as a two-day event which was extended to three-months. The project highlights the lack of facilities for food preparation in
direct provision centres and advocates for the ending of the direct provision system. After this, Kisyombe was invited by
Darina Allen to undertake a three-month internship at Ballymaloe Cookery School. She is now the volunteer director of the company. Our Table have supplied a line of hot sauces, sold by The Good Food Store, and Kisyombe runs a food stall in Dublin since January 2018 Alongside
Sinéad Burke, Eileen Flynn, and Mari Kennedy, Kisyombe was on a panel hosted by
Miriam O'Callaghan at
Electric Picnic in 2017 for The Women's Podcast. She is also active in the
Movement of Asylum Seekers in Ireland, She appeared in
Hozier's
Nina Cried Power video with other activists.
Social Democrat candidacy In 2019, Kisyombe ran as a candidate in the
2019 Irish local elections with the
Social Democrats in the Dublin City local electoral area of
North Inner City. She was the first person living in direct provision to run in local elections. She came under scrutiny when
The Sunday Times wrote about the discrepancies between her version of her asylum applications and the official records. Kisyombe claimed that the incident had hurt her campaign. ==Assault charge==