Rains fail but God still is faithful!

Dr Ruth Hulser

Having been back to Tabora recently, Dr Ruth Hulser updated us on activities at ‘Familia Moja Itetemia’ our partner organisation in Tanzania. Things are progressing well and everyone is working very hard despite the many difficulties encountered due to the climate in that part of Africa.

Unfortunately, the rains have been the poorest for 10 years. Not only does this affect ground water levels and the availability of drinking water, but also reduces the harvests and availability of scrubland for livestock. The lack of the rain at the normal time has meant a failed rice harvest and a very poor maize harvest. The maize price had been stable up to March. It increased by one and half times in the following two months. So many who are dependent maize as daily food are already suffering.

Kulwa and Dotto

This has already led to increased starvation for some and has led Familia Moja to support an extra six children from two different households. Kulwa and Dotto, 12-year-old twin girls, have kwashiorkor (severe malnutrition). Their father, a 69 year-old cow-hand who is HIV positive and an alcoholic, abandoned his wife and children when they were two years old. This family is typical of those that we aim to help – they are at risk due to extreme poverty and have no other source of help. Familia Moja is the last lifeline for many such families.

Suzanna and Maria [names changed], together with two other children, live in a household of an elderly distant relative; a lady of 65 who has no income. Their father [a causal worker] is also an alcoholic and has abandoned them. We learnt about them when they visited Mama Samweli’s neighbour every weekend. [The Samwelis are one the key families in Familia Moja Itetemia. They look after the children that form part of Dr Ruth’s ‘extended family’ in Tabora]

Mama Samweli

Mama Samweli suspected that there was a lack of food at their home and they had been sent by their relative to get fed at least once or twice. The children had a two-hour journey on foot each way. So on one occasion Familia Moja took the children back home by car only to discover that there was no food in the house and there were another two children all looked after by their emaciated elderly relative.

Familia Moja immediately stepped in to help. The girls [with their whole household] now eat 3 times a day and now have the energy to go back to school. Their 12 year old brother had never been to school as no one could buy him a school uniform. Familia Moja purchased school uniforms so they are allowed back in class and this boy is now getting tuition so he can catch up.

The support of individuals here in the UK is essential to allow the local staff of Familia Moja Itetemia to help their neighbours. Thank you for your help.

Becoming a Charity

We are still trying to set up the Familia Moja Community Project UK as a registered charity here in the UK. We put in our application earlier this year but it was rejected because we didn’t have a bank account. After several months of applying to one of the major high street banks we gave up with them and are about to apply to for an account with a bank that specialises in dealing with charities. Please pray that our application for the bank account will be successful and rapid this time and that we will then be able to put in another application to the Charity Commission.

Next time …

In the next edition we will talk ponds!

The Journey Begins

Thanks for joining us!


“And the King will say, ‘I tell you the truth, when you did it to one of the least of these my brothers and sisters, you were doing it to me!’

Jesus of Nazareth

Our story starts back in 2004 when Dr Ruth Huelser, a German GP working for the NHS in the UK, was sent out by the Church Mission Society (CMS) to work with them as a Link Missionary in a project, a Health Centre in the Diocese of Tabora, Tanzania .

While Ruth was working in the Health Centre, helping and overseeing its development, another smaller project grew up called ‘One Family’ or in Swahili ‘Familia Moja’. This project aimed to help to alleviate the suffering of people with insufficient means to maintain their health or life. A new focus of the group’s work has developed more recently. This is looking at how to deal with the lack of available water sources in the community which is key to income generation and survival. With support from Bunyan Baptist Church in Stevenage and other churches in the UK and Europe, Ruth was able to support many who otherwise would have had no help and would have died of starvation or illness.

In 2018, Ruth’s connection with CMS and the clinic came to an end and she returned to the UK. But her connections with Tanzania were strong as she had adopted two children there and this had been her home and life for many years. And the Team who had supported this work were desperate to continue this life saving work.

So to put it on a secure and accountable foundation, it was decided to create two charities – one in Tanzania to do the caring and one here in the UK to manage the funding from the various churches and donors. As of January 2019 we have a formally approved Tanzanian Charity. Setting up the UK Charity is taking a little more time – but the three Trustees – Rebecca Birch, Denise Beach and Ruth Huelser [and their trusty tech adviser Eric Beach] – are working hard to set this up and hope to have it completed very soon.

The Trustees and their trusty ‘tech adviser’

Please pray that the final bits of the process will fall into place and that the setting up of the bank account and the registration with the Charity Commission will go smoothly.