Being The Change creates revolution

Something happens when we pull ourselves together. Individually and collectively. When we glimpse and experience what we add up to…. and start to make choices we didn’t know we had. Many of us look around and yearn for change in our lives and in our work. That change may be relatively small, or it may be profound and appear painful to achieve.

Reaching out for others

When it’s your job to help people, sometimes the hardest part is reaching them – and you also have to get everyone working together. Volunteering and community engagement empower people to change the world from the grassroots up, especially when enabled by strong partnerships at every level.

Spreading and sharing the gospel

Our Focus is on building relationships and sharing messages that bring people closer to Jesus Christ. We are use the Spirit as we find ways to share the gospel across countries. We have the courage to share our testimony of the Savior when we feel prompted by the Spirit.

Empowering kids in Tanzania and Africa

We are always dedicated to empowering kids in Tanzania and across Africa to make a difference in their lives. If kids in Tanzania are lucky enough to go to school, it doesn’t mean they are lucky enough to have school supplies..

Touring tanzania and Africa

Celebrating the beauty of Tanzania, see the art and cultural and other members of creative industries. Tanzania is indeed a key cultural tourism destination, with a large number of major sites and a strong flow of international and domestic visitors. Tourists are more and more looking for true experiences, for meeting and getting to know other people and other cultures. And the best place is yet Tanzania.

Sunday 21 June 2015

First International Widows Day at Mnazi mmoja ground in the Capital City of Tanzania

 TAWIA Chairerson, Madame Rose Sarwatt and the Secretary General of  Tanzania Widows Association, mr. John Shabani



Tuesday June, 23rd 2015, will be the first United Nations International Widows Day in Tanzania, a day dedicated to raising awareness about the plight of widows around the world and taking action to help them.  International Widows Day, which are commemorated every June 23rd, was established by UN Resolution 65/189, which was sponsored by Gabon and cosponsored by an additional fifty-six countries, thanks in large part to the extraordinary leadership of Gabonese First Lady Sylvia Bongo Ondimba.  The campaign to establish International Widows Day was begun some years ago by the Loomba Foundation, an organization that has in many ways pioneered widows’ rights.
The establishment of International Widows Day will shed light on the epidemic of widowhood, a humanitarian crisis that has gone unnoticed for far too long. Widows and their children make up 15% of the world’s population, making widowhood an epidemic in the truest sense of the word. According to the Loomber Foundation,Worldwide, there are 259 million widows, 115 million of whom live in extreme poverty, according to a 2015 study. They are faced with stigmatization, their relatives often blaming them for their husbands’ deaths. The collective imagination in many areas of the world associates them with bad luck and even witchcraft. According to Raj Loomba who founded the Loomba Foundation in memory of his mother, Hundreds of elderly women, primarily widows, are killed for practicing witchcraft each year in Tanzania according to a report submitted to the CEDAW Committee by HelpAge International in 2008.
In other areas of the world, widows are subjected to grieving and funeral rites such as forced ‘purification’ through sexual violence, being ‘inherited’ by male relatives of their deceased husbands, head shaving, loss of freedoms and social status, and spoliation of their possessions. The incident of widowhood is often the catalyst for extreme poverty: in many countries, even where the law forbids it, male relatives of a widow’s deceased husband will chase her out of her house and seize her land, her possessions, and sometimes even her children. This sudden descent into poverty often forces widows to resort to begging and entering into dangerous sex work to support themselves and their families.
The more than 500 million children of widows worldwide are not only subject to kidnapping by their father’s relatives, but are deprived of schooling, health care, and proper nutrition because their mothers cannot afford to provide for them, continuing the cycle of poverty. 1.5 million of these children will die before their fifth birthday because their mothers cannot pay for health care. Extreme poverty also makes these children prime targets for human trafficking, with traffickers often tricking impoverished parents (frequently widows) into sending their children away to what they think will be a better life, when in fact these traffickers force children into sexual slavery, a phenomenon documented in Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn’s excellent book, Half the Sky.
In spite of these disturbing realities, the International Widows Day celebration in Tanzania will gives us reason to be hopeful.  Among the inspiring speakers at that day will be Dr. Hellen Kijo Bisimba - Executive Director of Legal and Human Rights Centre, Director of Tamwa – Tanzania Women Lawyers Association,  Angellah Kairuki - a special seat Member of Parliament of Tanzania since 2010 and Deputy Minister for Lands, Housing and Human Settlement. Lilian Liundi – Director of Tanzania Gender Networking Programme-TGNP. Also we expect to have peolple from RITA – Registration Insolvency and Trusteeship Agency.
The speakers at Widows day will share many practical, actionable ideas to help widows around the Tanzania.  Some will emphasize
-          The importance of establishing property rights for widows as well as rights to employment and self-employment, and others will emphasize:
-          The importance of teaching widows how to advocate for their own rights and of strengthening judicial systems so that laws protecting widows are enforced, 
-          The need for widows to have access to credit.  Microcredit has been proven to help lift women out of poverty, and their families too – as you may know, out that the World Bank found that women and girls reinvest 90% of their income in their families, compared to the 30-40% that men reinvest in their families.  Many panelists emphasized the importance of helping widows pay for their children’s education, which will help break the cycle of poverty by giving children the knowledge and skills to support themselves financially.  Other seaker will will stresse:
-          The importance of equality in marriage, so that women are prepared to support themselves financially after their husbands pass away.  All of the panelists emphasized the importance of bringing awareness to the plight of widowhood, a largely silent humanitarian crisis – as Purnima Mane eloquently put it, “widows’ rights are human rights.”
HOW WE DO 
We provide funding to widows for urgent basic needs like medical procedures, medication, housing, and utilities.  Through our employment program, we train widows to enter the workforce, investing in basic literacy, math, and computer skills programs for them and teaching them marketable skills like sewing, embroidery, beadwork, and woodworking. 
Through our partnerships, we can offer the widows we serve micro-loans to build businesses out of these skills.  We also create service based jobs for widows like childcare, elderly/hospice care, and housekeeping. roviding the orphanage with critically necessary caregivers and teachers at the same time as we provide widows with jobs and income.  We also help widows educate their children, keeping their children safe in the short term and improving their job prospects in the long term so that they can break the cycle of poverty.  There are currently over 500 widows in our program. Our work has only just begun.  We met and heard from so many inspiring leaders in widows’ rights; with their leadership and the international community’s dedication, we can make a difference in widows’ lives in Tanzania and around the world.

Thursday 4 June 2015

CHAMA CHA WAJANE TANZANIA - TAWIA, MKOMBOZI WA WAJANE TANZANIA

Huwezi kuitwa mtu aliyefanikiwa ikiwa watu waliokuzunguka, ndugu, jamaa, marafiki na jamii kwa ujumla wanaishi katika mazingira magumu.

Hivyo pamoja na mkakati wa John Shabani wa kujitolea kuwatembelea watu wanaoishi katika mazingira magumu na kutafuta namna ya kuwasaidia, mwanaharakati wa kujtolea wa haki za binadumu John Shabani; safari hii ameungana na mwanamama mwenye uchungu wa kutetea haki za mjane Bi Rose Sarwatt na kuanzisha chama cha wajane Tanzania.


 Chama cha Wajane Tanzania (Tanzania Widows Association) chenye usajili na S.A. 19708, ni chama kilichoanzishwa rasmi mnamo mwaka 2014, kikiwa na lengo la kuwaweka wajane pamoja, ili kutambuana, kufahamiana, kujua changamoto mbalimbali anazopitia mjane, na kutafuta ufumbuzi wa kutatua changamoto hizo.  Ikiwemo kusomesha watoto, elimu ya sheria, afya, saikologia, biashara na ujasiriamali.   

Vilevile chama kinajihusisha na kutoa elimu kwa jamii juu ya mjane, iwatambue wajane, kuwapenda, kuwathamini na kuwasaidia kwa namna moja ama nyingine, pia kujitoa kwa hali na mali kusaidia kupambana na changamoto anazopitia mjane.  Pia chama kinasimamia sheria inayotetea haki za mjane Tanzania, ikiwemo hati ya mirathi na usimamizi wa mali za familia baada ya kifo cha mume wa mjane.  Hivyo chama hiki kitarejesha matumaini mapya kwa mjane, na wajane watarajiwa.  Pia kwa namna moja au nyingine, kujihusiha na haki za mgane na watoto walioachwa na wazazi (yatima).
 



Mawasiliano

CHAMA CHA WAJANE TANZANIA
“Tanzania Widows Association”
P.O.Box 33476,
Dar es salaam
Simu: +255 754 366 530 – Mwenyekiti
  +255 713 778 778 – Katibu
E-mail: widowstz@gmail.com
FACEBOOK: Widows Tanzania
  TWITTER: @TanzaniaWidows