Divine Witness was not founded to enter a market. It emerged from one. Since 1896, our family has treated coffee not as a commodity, but as a responsibility — guarded, refined, and passed forward only when it was ready.
In an era before instant convenience, Divine Witness began with a single high-altitude estate. Harvests were judged by aroma alone. Any yield lacking depth was destroyed. This discipline became our doctrine.
Where others chase efficiency, we invested in patience. Beans were rested, cellared, and revisited until character emerged. Some years produced nothing worthy of release. Those years remain undocumented.
Divine Witness has never advertised publicly. Growth occurred through inheritance, not exposure. Our name passed quietly between collectors, connoisseurs, and houses that valued discretion.
We exist today not to expand, but to endure. Technology serves preservation, not acceleration. Each release remains limited by principle, not capacity.