Report from Familia Moja Itetemia

Below are some statistics provided to us by our Tanzanian partner organisation.

These show the numbers of people that they are supporting and the extent of the work that they are involved in.


FMI provide basis medication

FMI supports some of the poorest clients with basic medication.

In 2023 they delivered regular medication on 329 occasions to about 29 clients.

In the first 8 months of 2024 they delivered medication on another 139 occasions to about 18 clients.


FMI helps clients with trips to hospital

Where people need hospital trips, FMI will assist with transportation where people are too poor to afford that. Occasionally they will also help finance in-patient stays and help families with the logistics involved.

In 2023 they made 112 trips and helped with 6 in-patient stays.

In the first 8 months of 2024 they made another 26 trips and helped with 4 in-patient stays.


FMI’s biggest job recently has been feeding their clients

With poor harvests and near famine conditions, many of the poorest in Tabora have really struggled to feed themselves. If illness, age or disability mean that you cannot grow your own crops, the malnutrition or starvation will follow. FMI has been providing monthly basic food deliveries to many of their clients. These usually contain maize, beans, oil, salt, sugar, tealeaves, soap, matches, and dried fishes. Occasionally the also contain special foods for clients with special needs – like ingredients for ‘super porridge’. 

In 2023 FMI supported just over 50 families on a monthly basis, families that would otherwise have had no food security.

In the first 8 months of 2024 they supported another 35 households.

In the 20 months between January 23 and August 2024 they also needed to supply emergency maize rations to people who suddenly found themselves short of food and needed short-term help.


Other assistance to FMI Clients

FMI also provides other assistance where needed. They have;

  • paid rent for three households – one elderly man, one single-parent family with seven children and one widow looking after two grandchildren.
  • housed two frail elderly clients in our 2 unit protected-living facility – providing residential care and nursing care when needed.
  • set up a hostel for 14 vulnerable children [16 from August 2024], thus enabling them to continue their education. There are 6 children in secondary school, 8 in primary school and 2 older children [the recent arrivals who are being homeschooled as they arrived completely illiterate. They will join school in January 2025]. The hostel is run by a fostering couple, Mama and Baba Samweli, plus one resident teacher and 2 ladies who help cooking. 
  • supported 36 children with school uniforms, exercise books and pens, and shoes – without which they can’t go to school.
  • supported a handful of other children who needed extra food or tuition to enable them to progress in school.

FMI also supports women with HIV to become self-sufficient

FMI supports a women’s group where they learn to set up their own market gardens. They initially get paid to help and learn. Later they are funded to buy seeds and are allocated small areas near our rainwater collection ponds. With intensive supervision they learn to help each other.

All of these women would otherwise have been destitute. This initiative helps them, not only with the ability to provide for themselves financially, but also helps them to learn new skills, gain self confidence and life coping skills well beyond market garden work. Mama Ndugu meets and works with these women every day. 


FMI funds its own workers

At the start of this period there were 9 ‘members’ of FMI, each playing a role to help run the project. There was concern that there wasn’t enough money to continue to fun all of them. A kind donor provided 5 of them with small motorbikes to enable them to be self-sufficient without the FMI ‘stipend’ that they were given to cover living expenses. As such the team has shrunk to 4 ‘members’ which has obviously increased the workload and decreased the capacity for the agricultural projects.

It is hoped that FMCP-UK will be able to fund the return of these ‘members’ to increase the capacity of the team. We are not the only group that assist with funding. There are some individuals who donate money directly and there are also supporters in Germany [where Dr Ruth comes from].


How can I help?

You can help by praying for the work and the funds necessary.

Or you can give to assist in the financing of this project.

You can give using our CAFDonate secure portal which allows us to collect Gift Aid if you are a UK tax payer.

https://cafdonate.cafonline.org/11331#!/DonationDetails

Thank you.

A Christmas Newsletter from Tabora

Do not be afraid, for I am with you. Don’t be afraid, because I am your God, I will strengthen you and I will help you too……

Isaiah 41.10

Maybe you remember how we looked forward to this year with concern last year…

And really: this year again there was no rice harvest in Tabora and the corn harvest was very poor for the second time. This is now our second year of severe shortages of staple foods. The rest of the situation hasn’t improved much since last year’s inflation. High gasoline prices are still driving up the price of oil, sugar, tea, flour, and so on. Medication remains expensive and we just didn’t know how or whether we could ‘manage’ it without letting our families down?

And lo and behold : we are almost at the end of another year: and miracle of miracles – we have been able to support all of our ‘families’, ‘single people’, ‘sick people’ and ‘dying people’.

The Lord stands by our side, just as you have stood by our side.

And so we were able to continue to support our weakest and poorest households, formally andand informally: Old single people, abandoned by their families and no longer strong enough to till a field on their own, look for water, collect wood, etc. Or widows who often ‘stay’ as the sole support of small children or grandchildren. Or children who are ‘orphans’, where there is no one left who feels responsible for these children. But also sick people where the families simply cannot afford the expensive monthly medication (epilepsy medication can cost over €30 a month per person……)

We also continue to care for 2 old ladies in our mini retirement home.

We have 9 children in our mini hostel (in my old house in Tabora) cared for by Mama Samweli as house mother, so that these children can continue to go to school and grow up in a safe, ‘normal’ family group.

Here is me with ‘hostel’ ‘trip’ : taking everyone to a swim in the only pool in Tabora

We were also able to support our breakfast group for 45 pre school children until last month. The boy is one of the children from the breakfast group. He lost his leg in an RTA and we got him some crutches for now until he is old enough to get a prosthetic leg)

We also still are selling subsidized whole grain corn flour to the poorest.

Our Irrigation’s Project for our rainwater collection ponds and the small market gardens has now been taken a step further with drip irrigation in the first 8 gardens (saves water and a lot of time).

One of us who needed more help last year is Beatus Chundu, a man in his 70s [photo below]. We noticed him 3 years ago because he could only buy half a kilo of cornmeal in the shop (his only food for 3 days – after he gradually sold a piece of clothing or household item in front of the shop each time…). Since we supported him with a monthly basic food package, he regained his strength and showed himself to be a very lively personality with a great sense of humour and great trust in God. This year, however, he needed an operation, which we made possible for him, but he recovered very slowly and with many complications. He has now developed a hernia, but the surgeon advises against further surgery. So, he struggles, and we now visit him more than twice a week to be able to support him

He is a delicate little child: here with his grandma and we continue to look after him and the family.

Christopher is another of our Familia Moja clients. He had reached a very important ‘milestone’ in his life: he turned two! As you may remember, his mother died shortly after his birth due to complications from her cesarean section, leaving his grandmother alone and penniless with 6 children under the age of 7. Since 50% of children without mothers in Africa do not survive early childhood, we had promised – with our trust in God – that we would provide baby milk as well as the basic food for the whole family (even though we had no money for it at the time ). 2 years later we see little Christopher (named by us because he was/is our Advent / Christmas miracle) and he is ALIVE! And all the other children too!

We are very grateful to the Lord, He has strengthened and helped us: another whole year and shown that we can really ALWAYS trust in Him. -No matter what our external circumstances tell us!

That’s why we wish you/all of you a blessed Christmas and HAPPY New Year and we also say to you: “Don’t be afraid…                                                                
With gratitude for your prayers and help 

Ruth Hulser                         

                                                               

On behalf of the FMCP-UK Trustees, we would also like to thank all of our generous donors who have supported us – concerts, tradecraft stalls, collections at funerals, other events and just straight donations. Without your generosity this work would not be able to contine.

May God bless you and may you have a very Happy Christmas!

Monsoon June? We should be so lucky!

While we in the UK complain about the amount of rain falling this month, those in Tanzania are pleased for rain to fall and allow them to grow food.

When we wrote our first blog, Familia Moja Itetemia had managed to complete digging 17 holes to act as rainwater collection ponds. Due to the low rainfall, only half of the ponds had any water in them by March. However, thanks to God and the prayers of churches in Tanzania and the UK in April, there were unexpected heavy rains which have filled up most of the ponds and raised the groundwater levels everywhere.

Waiting for rain!
Dr Ruth testing the depth of this pond.

Since then several more have been dug and there are now over 20 in the area, some more successful than others but all contributing to the available irrigation water and raising the water table and so improving local wells. Some have been stocked with fish to provide a source of quality protein.

The local people have been able to plant gardens around these and produce a harvest that has enabled them to survive and help themselves.

We have learnt that the ponds are more useful if the gardens are planted using soil improving and water sparing agricultural techniques. We are following the techniques taught in Farming God’s Way, a model established in Zimbabwe.

With the failed rains we now know, that not only do we need to place the ponds at the lowest part of the valley but also, we need to teach and demonstrate how gardens can be made sustainable even under the hardiest circumstances. We therefore, decided to hold seminars for all Familia Moja members on how to plant a garden using Farming God’s Way techniques. In March we held a seminar and had practical sessions laying out the first garden. Since then a second has been laid out by members and a third and fourth are in preparation.

In the next two months we are hoping to establish drip irrigation for two acres. This will be the first such scheme in the region and could serve as a model for many.

Next Time

We will introduce you to some of the staff who are working with Familia Moja Itetemia.