Wazi. Open. Exposed. Village Life in Kilimanjaro. AIDS. Stigma. Living With Hope. Simplicity. Solidarity. Strength in Community. Human. A Documentary Film.

Some Fresh Photos

Here’s a look into our last couple days…

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We Made It Alive

We’re here and the internet is slower than a one legged hippo.

Talk to you in a couple days…

Tanzania

Tanzania

Located in East Africa on the Indian Ocean. To the north are Uganda and Kenya; to the west, Burundi, Rwanda, and Congo; and to the south, Mozambique, Zambia, and Malawi. Tanzania covers an area roughly twice the size of California. It is home to Mt. Kilimanjaro (the highest point in Africa), Lake Victoria (the second largest lake in the world), and the Great Rift Valley.

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People

More than 37.1 million people live in Tanzania. Kiswahili or Swahili (Kiunguju in Zanzibar) and English are the official languages; Arabic and numerous other local languages are spoken as well. Virtually all of Tanzania’s inhabitants speak Bantu languages. There are approximately 130 ethnic groups. Inhabitants of Indian and Arab descent constitute approximately 1% of the population and are concentrated in Zanzibar. The Bantu-speaking peoples include the Sukuma (the republic’s largest ethnic group), Bena, Chagga, Gogo, Ha, Haya, Hehe, Luguru, Makonde, Makua, Ngoni, Nyakyusa, Nyamwezi, and Nyaturu. In addition, the Masai speak a Nilotic language; the Sandawe speak a language akin to Khoikhoi; and the Iraqw speak a Cushitic language.

About 45% of the mainland population is Christian, while 35% is Muslim, and about 20% follow traditional religious beliefs. The population of Zanzibar is almost completely Muslim.

Economy

Tanzania’s primarily agrarian economy is constrained by geography and environmental factors such as low and erratic rainfall, soil erosion and deforestation. Only 8% of Tanzania’s land is under cultivation, although about 80% of its population are employed in agriculture. The principal cash crops of coffee, cotton, sisal and tobacco have been affected by instability in world market demand and rising costs of imported fuel, fertilizers, and equipment.

An infrastructure that is deteriorating due to internal and external causes also affects the country’s economy. Communications and transport have been neglected. Tanzania has 127,000 landline telephones, 115,000 Internet users, and 2.8 televisions per 1000 people. Its 134,000 motor vehicles travel 52,800 miles of highway. The southern third of the country is especially isolated, even from inferior transport services.

Health
Life Expectancy

Men-51 years; Women-53 years


Infant mortality: 77.8 deaths per 1000 live births


51% of the population live in poverty


1 physician per 20,511 people


HIV/AIDS rate in adults: 8.09%


68% of adults are literate 


Compulsory education 7 – 14 years

Areas of Concern

HIV/AIDS, with 1.3 million cases in Tanzania, represents a serious health concern. Outside donations have helped fund much of the progress made in human services. For decades, Tanzania has been either at or near the top of the list of African nations in per capita receipt of international aid.

Tanzania still hosts more than a half-million refugees, more than any other African country, mainly from Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, despite the international community’s efforts at repatriation; disputes with Malawi over the boundary in Lake Nyasa (Lake Malawi) and the meandering Songwe River remain dormant.

History

Arab traders first began to colonize the area in 700. Portuguese explorers reached the coastal regions in 1500 and held some control until the 17th century, when the sultan of Oman took power. With what are now Burundi and Rwanda, Tanganyika became the colony of German East Africa in 1885. After World War I, it was administered by Britain under a League of Nations mandate and later as a UN trust territory.

Tanganyika became independent on Dec. 9, 1961; Zanzibar on Dec. 10, 1963. On April 26, 1964, the two nations merged into the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar. The name was changed to Tanzania six months later.

In Feb., 1967, Nyerere issued the Arusha Declaration, a major policy statement that called for egalitarianism, socialism, and self-reliance. It promised a decentralized government and a program of rural development called ujamaa (“pulling together”) that involved the creation of cooperative farm villages. Factories and plantations were nationalized, and major investments were made in primary schools and health care. While Nyerere put some of the declaration’s principles into practice, it was not clear if power in Tanzania was, in fact, being decentralized.

An invasion by Ugandan troops in Nov. 1978 was followed by a counterattack in Jan. 1979, in which 5,000 Tanzanian troops were joined by 3,000 Ugandan exiles opposed to President Idi Amin. Within a month, full-scale war developed. Tanzanian president Julius Nyerere kept troops in Uganda in open support of former Ugandan president Milton Obote, despite protests from opposition groups, until the national elections in Dec. 1980.

By the 1980s, it was clear that the economic policies set out by the Arusha Declaration had failed. The economy continued to deteriorate with cycles of alternating floods and droughts, which reduced agricultural production and exports. In Nov. 1985, Nyerere stepped down as president. Ali Hassan Mwinyi, his vice president, succeeded him. Running unopposed, Mwinyi was elected president in October. Shortly thereafter plans were announced to study the benefits of instituting a multiparty democracy, and in Oct. 1995 the country’s first multiparty elections since independence took place.

President Benjamin William Mkapa (1995–2005) sought to increase economic productivity while dealing with serious pollution problems and deforestation. With more than one million people infected with HIV, AIDS care and prevention have been major public health issues. On foreign policy, Tanzania has taken a leading diplomatic role in East Africa, hosting peace talks for the factions fighting in neighboring Burundi. The UN International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) is located in the town of Arusha. In Oct. 2000, Mkapa was easily reelected. In 2002, opposition leaders and foreign donors criticized the president’s costly new $21 million personal jet.

In 2005 presidential elections, foreign minister Jakaya Kikwete of the Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) Party won with 80% of the vote.

Prime Minister Lowassa resigned in February 2008 over a scandal involving an American energy company, Richmond Development, which was hired to provide Tanzania with generators to supply electricity to the country during a power shortage. The company never began the operation, yet Lowassa urged the government to renew the contract. Mizengo Pinda replaced Lowassa as prime minister.

Sources

http://www.tanzania.go.tz/statistics.html

http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/world/A0847817.html

http://www.elca.org/countrypackets/tanzania/desc.html

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/tz.html

Facts on AIDS

Keri did a great job finding these facts on AIDS and HIV in Africa… Some really alarming figures…

  • -Sub-Saharan Africa remains the most affected region in the global AIDS epidemic. Although just over 10% of the world’s population live in this region, more than two out of three (68%) adults and nearly 90% of children infected with HIV live here.

    - More than three in four (76%) of global deaths due to an AIDS-related illnesses in 2007, occurred in sub-Saharan Africa. This proportion is stark evidence of the unmet need for antiretroviral treatment in the region.

    -In sub-Saharan Africa an estimated 1.7 million people were newly infected with HIV in 2007, bringing to 22.5 million the total number of people living with the virus.

    -the majority of people living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa (61%) are women.

    -AIDS continues to be the single largest cause of mortality in sub-Saharan Africa; of the global total of 2.1 million adult and child deaths due to AIDS in 2007, 1.6 million occurred in this region.

    -Children are particularly affected—there are an estimated 11.4 million orphans due to AIDS in this region.

    -Currently, 33 million people worldwide are now living with HIV

    -the total number of people living with the virus in sub-Saharan Africa is 22.5 million

    -Over sixty percent of these are women – mostly young women.

    -although two thirds of the people who need treatment are still unable to obtain it.

    -Prevention is the key. It is a highly complex issue. But this can be no excuse for inaction.

    -And we still have a long, long way to go to make HIV prevention truly effective.

    -Despite all the progress we’ve made, for every one person who starts taking anti-retroviral drugs, another five become infected with HIV.

    -Instead of getting shorter, the queues for HIV treatment become longer by the day, and the provision of universal access to treatment gets more and more expensive.

    -This is a frightening prospect. It highlights the fact that AIDS is going to be with us for a long time to come – not just for years but for generations.

    -We are already paying the price of not taking stronger action to prevent the spread of HIV earlier on in the epidemic.

    - If we don’t do more to prevent new HIV infections today, prospects for the future are grim and costly.

    -Globally speaking, fewer than 10 per cent of women in low and middle-income countries have access to services to prevent mother-to-child transmission As a result, half a million children are born with HIV each year.

    -In many cases, the relatively low status of women, and discriminatory attitudes towards them, mean that they feel they can’t take vital steps to keep themselves healthy.

    -Ignorance is a major issue. Some women simply don’t know the most basic facts about HIV.

    -Others have information, but can’t act on it because they are so dependent on male family members, and so terrified of the stigma that surrounds HIV that even if they know they should get their partners to use condoms or take an HIV test, they don’t dare to do so.

    GettingWordOut.com

    Our main site at GettingWordOut.com is almost finished and currently up in its premature state.

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    It will feature all of our main information regarding Ravished Hearts and our Getting Word Out campaign. It will include detailed information on our team, our core values, our mission and vision, our past experience and everything else going on.

    check it out: gettingwordout.com