African Initiatives has just received this update from our Tanzanian partner, the Pastoral Women's Council (PWC), regarding local pastoralist's land dispute with Tanzanian Conservation Ltd (TCL) which has the same ownership as US based company Thomson Safari.
"Just now the DC [District Commissioner] is harassing Maanda and Melau (PWC staff) and has locked up 5 men for 'trespassing' on the [Thomson Safaris/TCL] farm where they were grazing livestock but you can't trespass on disputed land. The men are still in prison, they were imprisoned on Friday as the DC is 'making an example of them'. They are due in court tomorrow but no one wants to be accountable for locking them up. The DC won't appear so the police won't appear. Shilinde (Advocate) is in Loliondo with 2 journalists to try and expose the DC for what he is doing. The DC has threatened to de-register PWC as he claims we send the men to the [Thomson/TCL] farm to 'intimidate Thomson tourists'. The DC also threatened to lock up Maanda and Melau but nothing has come of this.
Melau spoke to the DC and he has somewhat relented from his initial state of confrontation. Last news is that more Maasai have taken their cattle to graze in the disputed area in retaliation of the DC's action, without, and I emphasize, any encouragement from PWC. Thomson's new manager, John, seems very reasonable and perplexed by all the recent goings on. The same men were arrested last week and he called to have them released but then they were of course re-arrested this time without bail. As of yet we still await the court case."
Tuesday, 31 July 2012
Wednesday, 18 July 2012
Clubbing Together
Val Bishop explores one of the most successful initiatives in our girls' education programme in Tanzania
Nabaya Parmya is one of the
girls who has benefited. She is 15 years old and attends Lake Natron Secondary
School. Both a member and secretary of the club she has seen changes in others
and experienced them herself. Nabaya says that she has had “the opportunity to
learn about issues affecting my education like HIV/AIDS, female genital
mutilation and pregnancy as well as to talk openly about problems at school. I understand
my rights better and how I can communicate with people in order to stand up for
them. In Maasai culture, girls have no say on any issues that affect their
lives” It is Nabaya’s father, elder brothers and uncles who determine her
destiny.
In
Ngorongoro, Kilolo and Mbulu districts in Tanzania girls are becoming a force
to be reckoned with. African Initiatives’ partners the Pastoral Women’s Council
(PWC) and the Community Aid and Small Enterprises Consultancy (CASEC) are
working with schools to establish ‘girls’ clubs’ in 40 secondary schools. These
clubs aim to empower girls through exploring their rights, and helping them to
build the confidence to claim them. In Ngoronogoro District PWC work with
Maasai groups, where girls have to find their place in a highly patriarchal
society and have to overcome huge challenges. Often parents and communities do
not see the worth in educating girls, it costs money and is there any point
investing it in daughters when they will leave the family fold and marry into another?
Often they marry early; often they are forced to marry early. Their dowries
come in useful.
Girls’ Clubs
like the one at Lake Natron help students like Nabaya to access rights that we
in the west often take for granted. When Nabaya grows up she will be able to
pass this knowledge to her children. In this way girls such as Nabaya can help
change an entire community. And it starts with a club.
Val Bishop
Head of Communications
Monday, 9 July 2012
Going Global at Sexey's School, Somerset
Tuesday 26th June saw the first of the summers Go Global Days at Sexey's School in the south west of England. Ellen Hubbard, African Initiatives' volunteer gives her account of the very long, but rewarding day.
The day started bright and
early, I met with Sian and the other
volunteers at the African Initiatives office at 6am - a shock to the system but
I soon saw the necessity of it. We arrived
at Sexeys School in Somerset by 7.30am, meeting two more of the team of 12
volunteers there. Luckily Sian took on a
‘mothering role’, supplying us with breakfast and snacks, and generally making
sure that we (her volunteers) were well looked after.
The hour of unloading,
orientating ourselves in the school and setting up flew by. I had organised the resources into boxes for
each of the workshops the previous week, so found myself on the ball at this
point trying to help to ensure that the right resources went to each volunteer. With 10 workshops in total covering; Malawi – Sustainable Inventions, Ghana – Adinkra Printing,
New Zealand – The Haka, China – Storytelling and Asia
– Playground Games there were a lot of resources!
My main role during the sessions
with the 240 Key Stage 3 students was to support Manuela who was running a workshop
about New Zealand, where students learned the famous Haka. Even though I had
looked through the workshop previously, I felt that I was learning more about
Australasia and in particular New
Zealand in all four of the sessions I helped
run. This pleased me because if I was learning then surely the students were,
right? Manuela and I wanted to try and encourage all the students to get
involved and have a go. It didn’t take them long to get into doing the Haka,
and then creating their own.
After the fifth and final workshop
all the students returned to the main hall for a short assembly and debriefing
of the day. As part of this Sian got every single person on their feet, and
Eleanor and Manuela led all the 240 students plus staff in a huge group
Haka! I performed it at the front with
some student volunteers for everyone else to follow. This truly was amazing and
a lovely end to the day, which was then topped off by the thanks we were given;
the school gave a thank you card, flowers and a box of chocolates to each
volunteer.
I learnt a lot from the day,
and really enjoyed working to increase the awareness of a world that has always
intrigued me, and which I believe everyone should be encouraged to explore and
get to know. Even if the students only enjoyed the day half as much as I did,
and learnt half as much as I did about New Zealand in each of the workshops,
then it was certainly a success.
Since this Go Global day I have
danced the Haka to myself each time I needed to lift my mood, it works so well!
I am already looking forward to any opportunity I get to be involved with future
Go Global days, and I think I would now even have the confidence to run a
workshop myself.
For more information and to
book a Go Global day at your school please visit www.globaleducationinitiatives.org.uk/go-global-days
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
Day 8: The Onion
Today was my last full day in Tanzania.
Perhaps it is the case that we can never truly understand another culture, especially
one which has such essential differences to one’s own; but to me Tanzanian
culture is like an onion. You peel back one piece of skin and feel a rush of
knowledge before you realise that there is another, and then another layer. On
the one hand there is a fierce traditionalism, coupled often with religion and strong
moral values and boundaries; on the other a young Tanzanian culture which embraces
sometimes more western values such as clubbing. Are they in conflict with each other
or just different threads of the same cloth?
One of the CASEC members of staff, Huruma
is getting married this week. His brother explained to me that as well as the
wedding ceremony there is a ‘send off’ ceremony for the Bride, and (which
greatly excites me) a ‘kitchen party’, which is attended only by women who bring
kitchen gifts and offer advice on how to be a good wife. (I wonder if John
Lewis do lists for this?)
Sometimes projects are like that onion –
there are many layers to them. One aspect of our girls’ education project is to
work with communities to build dormitories, and train teachers as
Matrons/Patrons who can supervise them to ensure the girls are safe. Pendo, a
young, feisty, twenty-something woman working at CASEC believes they are much
more than that,
“The project touches everywhere, including girls’ health and psychology. The matron or patrons we train… They are so important. I always talk to girls in the field. They had infections, not sexual infections but urinary tract infections because they did not know how to look after themselves or because of the clothes they wore. They were so scared.
“The project touches everywhere, including girls’ health and psychology. The matron or patrons we train… They are so important. I always talk to girls in the field. They had infections, not sexual infections but urinary tract infections because they did not know how to look after themselves or because of the clothes they wore. They were so scared.
It is a big condition over here but they
had no one to go and talk to, even the teachers isolated themselves. At one
school there was only a Head Mistress and no other female teachers, the girls
cannot go and talk about that with their head! The girls didn’t know that they
had the right to talk to a teacher about things like this. Even the teachers
didn’t know they could be more than teachers and have different roles. The
chance of talking to someone freely was a big thing.”
Sometimes, when you live in a world where
it is so easy to access information through the click of a mouse we forget what
it is like not to know. Now, even
schools who are not building dormitories are requesting that CASEC organise the
training of matrons and patrons for them, seeing that they improve the school
infrastructure and benefit their students. Says Pendo: “It’s not about
dormitories, about rights; it’s about who we are.”
You only have to speak to Pendo to see how
passionately she feels about these issues. In a predominately male sector she
holds her own despite her youth. Like that onion she too has layers. In fact, she
was runner up in Miss Tanzania a few weeks ago which has given her some status –
she has been highlighted as a role model for girls in meetings with District
Education Officers. Today, I asked her jokingly whether she’d thought about
entering politics. She laughed, “From what I see, politicians stand up and lie.
I couldn’t do that – I need to be with the girls.”
I leave CASEC thinking that there lies the power in the work we do together. We are all with those girls.
Sadly, here ends my Tanzanian journey, I can only recommend that you come and have your own - in the immortal words, I will be back,
Thanks for joining me.Asante sana. Kwaheri.
Thanks for joining me.Asante sana. Kwaheri.
Monday, 2 July 2012
Day 7 - The Girl Effect
Random Tanzanian experiences of the day. On
the way out to a meeting we passed a petrol station with the usual beautifully
manicured grounds and….. 2 Brontosauruses displayed on the forecourt. The mind
boggles. I have also seen the best
mobility scooter ever – a wheelchair with the front of a bike attached to it.
Even better, the guy was motoring down the road, full pelt in the middle of
Tanzanian traffic; an incredible act of bravery.
Not sure if you’ve ever heard of ‘the girl
effect’? It is something to do with men but not in the way you might imagine.
The girl effect is something to do with all of us. Put simply, it could change
the world. Today, more than 600 million girls live in the developing world and
the total global population of girls, already at its highest point ever is set
to peak in the next decade. Approximately only a ¼ of these girls are not in
school. Are we feeling depressed yet?
Let’s flip the coin and think about those ¾
who are in school, and the impact that they have on their families, their
communities and their countries. When a girl in the developing world receives
seven or more years of education (that’s getting into secondary school folks)
she marries 4 years later and has, on average 2.2 children less. An extra year
of primary school boosts girls’ eventual wages by 10 -20%. An extra year of
secondary school, 15-25%. Tellingly, there is a well known Swahili saying
“Educate one women and you educate an entire family”.*
As you will have gathered if you have been
reading this blog whilst I’ve been out here – many of the programmes our
partners deliver are based around education; whether this is girls’ education,
HIV/AIDS education, CASEC’s Youth Centre or Land Rights. What we haven’t really
mentioned is community education. PWC have just begun work on a Song and Dance
project. Its aim is clear; we want to get girls into primary school to
implement our secondary school projects. Although primary education is
universal in Tanzania, the number of girls enrolled in Maasai districts is low
and the drop out ratio, high – often due to forced early marriages.
What this project does is to take
traditionally and commonly used Maasai ways of communication (song, dance and
drama) and use them instead of the western “meetings” to educate parents and
local government as to the importance of sending girls to school. This is the
first time this methodology has been used in Tanzania. A Kenyan group has trained
community trainers who work with children in 15 schools to develop songs,
dances and dramas which they then perform. It’s an exciting project – and,
although only going for 7 months is already seeing results.
The beauty of it is that it’s not PWC
educating parents and local policy makers – it’s the kids themselves. And you
can’t get much more powerful than that.
*I don’t have all these facts in my head by
the way, if you would like the sources please email me val@african-initiatives.org.uk,
tweet @AIGlobal or facebook African Initiatives.
Sunday, 1 July 2012
Day 6 – Land Rights and Fights
Sunday is not a day of rest for my
colleague Christine and myself. Today we are meeting an organisation based just
outside of Arusha, CEDESOTA, working on land rights. Jackson, the Coordinator
is taking us out to one of the wards (consisting of 4 villages) where they work.
We set out on the road to Kilimanjaro – one
of the highways in Tanzania. Again I am impressed by the well maintained lawn
and flower beds which surround the businesses and hotels we pass. They take
such care of things in this country. We drive past a car dealership selling
shiny new 4x4s, blue tractors and red motorbikes. The scene is juxtaposed by
the herds’ boy passing with his goats, grazing along the road as they go, and framed
by the tree covered hills and mountains – old and new Tanzania.
I am enthralled still by the ‘garden
centres’ one finds by the side of roads in Tanzania – beautiful plants, trees
and shrubs lined up carefully in neat lines , ready for buyers to jump out of
their cars. There are no garden gnomes here, instead, a pair of tall ceramic
geese. The further we get out of Arusha
the more coffee plantations we see, mixed in with maize and the banana trees,
looking as though they are ready to launch into the sky, and which, it appears,
can grow virtually anywhere.
About 30 kilometres outside the city we
leave the “tarmac road” as Jackson calls it. At the mouth of the track we’re
taking stand the usual assortment of stalls and small shops: a hair dresser,
vegetable sellers. Soon we have driven through these and there is nothing for
miles except a sea of sunflowers. Initially they are green and growing but as
we clock up the miles the plants become brown, the leaves tissue paper like,
brittle. There has not been enough rain here. The local villages will suffer.
We pass a boy with an 8 foot metal joist
balancing precariously on the back of his bike; another is leading a solitary
cow by a rope. The road is bumpy, crumpled by a giant’s hand. We are now in
pastoralist areas we are told. Some have been forced to settle due to increasing
pressure on land and we catch a glimpse through the sunflowers of a small blue
house with an immaculate garden and chicken coup.
Land is an issue in Tanzania. Pastoralists,
traditionally nomads who travel with their herds using the different seasons as
their guide, are now fighting against those who wish to put the land to other
uses, whether they be tourist companies, multinationals or the Tanzanian
government. African Initiatives are about to start a new project with the
Ujaama Community Resource Trust (UCRT), an organisation who has worked in the
Ngorongoro district for many years. In the past African Initiatives has
supported UCRT and their communities to put together Land Use Plans, legal
documents which legalise the pastoralist right to use their land, their way.
This new programme goes a step further. For the first time UCRT will work with
multiple villages to secure rights over communal grazing land, so important for
their livelihoods and, of course often the only water sources in the area. The
project will reach 64,000 pastoralists. Importantly, it will also secure land
rights for 33,000 women- traditionally unable to own land.
As we drive back towards the tarmac road I
wonder how my community would act if we had to suddenly fight for our right to
live there. The villages which UCRT will work with, and those supported by CEDESOTA
would, I think, have a big advantage over us – they are united. And as Jackson
says, “We cannot succeed if we are not united.”
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