INTRODUCING THE UNITE YOUTH AMBASSADOR PROGRAM

CULTIVATING CONNECTION, CAMARADERIE AND COMPASSION IN THE TIME OF COVID-19

Ambassador cover photo 2_SMALL.jpg

Unite’s Vision: A world in which people UNITE in service, crossing borders seen and unseen, so that every human may live with health, hope, opportunity and dignity.

Last week we launched a new 6-week-long pilot “Unite Youth Ambassador Program” connecting college student Ambassadors across America to our Unite Scholars in Tanzania to promote friendship, connection and collaboration, creativity and imagination, camaraderie and compassion, and academic and professional success. Click HERE to meet our Ambassadors. Click HERE to meet our Unite Scholars enrolled in this program. Click HERE to meet our leadership team.

As I am included in every Ambassador-Scholar What’s App group, I can report that the program is off to an awesome and enthusiastic start… Why? My phone is blowing up! “Ping,” “ping,” “ping ping ping” all day every day. In fact as I write this I am listening to Lila, Quinn and John John on a Zoom call behind me sharing stories and discussing John’s John’s rabbit keeping business. This extraordinary group of college students (who come from Northwestern University, UC San Diego, University of Michigan and Fairfield University) are busy texting and video-chatting every day with their paired scholars, introducing themselves and their families; sharing their dreams, challenges and passions; discussing such topics as the impact of the coronavirus; leadership and the power of mindset; astrophysics, black holes and space programs; livestock keeping, best organic farming techniques and food insecurity; chemical kinetics and engineering; pop culture and their favorite music; and so much more.

Each of our Ambassador/Scholar teams is engaging in academic challenges and preparing creative final projects. Some teams are working on writing new music to perform and rap videos, some are preparing group speeches and poetry, some are even doing side-by-side workout challenges (sit ups, push ups, sprints). While they may be 7,000 to 10,000 miles apart, they are together through technology and in heart and spirit… For me (note Unite’s vision statement above) this program is A DREAM COME TRUE.

In July, after our Unite Scholars head back to school in Tanzania for their A-Levels, we will compile all of their creative projects and present them to you, our extended Unite family, for your enjoyment. For now, please click on the links below for some video insights to this program:

  • Click HERE for a 60-second video capturing highlights from this first week of connection.

  • Click HERE for a short video higlighting a recent conversation between Loveness and CJ.

  • Click HERE for a short video of Danny and Imani discussing their love of music.

Ambassador cover photo 3_SMALL.jpg

WANT TO GET INVOLVED?

Contact Program Youth Director Lila Wells at lilawells2023@u.northwestern.edu.

To date, Lila and her teammates have enrolled a number of “Guest Speakers” from such academic institutions as Northwestern University and Greens Farms Academy and such businesses as EY and MILK who have kindly and generously agreed to submit five to 10-minute videos of themselves speaking about a topic of their choice (topics currently range from economics and globalization, business development, stress management and essay writing to organic chemistry, leadership and public speaking techniques). These speakers and their presentations will soon be featured on our Uniteafricafoundation.org website for your review.

Follow us on Instagram and Facebook at @unitetnz. We are posting regularly and the excitement and creative vision of these Ambassador-Scholar teams is thrilling to see and be part of. Follow our hashtags: #unitetnz, #unite_scholars, #unitehummingbirds.

“It has been so delightful and fruitful to connect with David who is such a bright student living a daily life that is so different than my own but with whom I share so many similarities and interests. I’ve been learning more about the education sys…

“It has been so delightful and fruitful to connect with David who is such a bright student living a daily life that is so different than my own but with whom I share so many similarities and interests. I’ve been learning more about the education system outside the U.S., and I’ve been learning some Swahili as well as a bit about Tanzanian culture. So far we have discussed our goals, leadership, science, and current events. For our creative project, we will do a skit where we both act as news channel hosts/ reporters, and we’ll be informing the public about the impact of this amazing program. We plan to have some guest interviews in our skit as well.” ~Ramzy Issa, rising Sophomore at Northwestern University.

Screenshots from some of the many videos being sent back and forth, ambassador to scholar, scholar to ambassador. So much LOVE, HOPE & JOY is being spread around the world!

Screenshots from some of the many videos being sent back and forth, ambassador to scholar, scholar to ambassador. So much LOVE, HOPE & JOY is being spread around the world!

UTRT7258.jpeg

“I'm glad to have this opportunity to connect with unique and interesting people around the world. John John (my paired scholar) is a great partner for me with his entrepreneurial disposition, skill and ability in raising animals, and with his curiosity and kindness. And, as an engineer, I am learning to be more conscious of other ways of problem solving.”

- Quinn Boyd, rising Sophomore at University of California San Diego.

Unite Scholars Extend their Blessings

As the assault of COVID-19 continues and the wildfire of infections, fear, sickness and death penetrates the remotest corners of Planet Earth, many of us wonder: What can we do? How can we help?

Like countless others, our Unite Scholars face an extremely challenging time rife with hardship and worry. Unite has provided each of our 70+ teammates and scholars everything from food relief, sanitizers, gloves and face masks to interest-free small business loans, and we continue to seek more ways to be of service. Last week our Program Director Anty Marche told me that she sent one of our scholars, Loyce Cheja, just $20 to purchase some food items from Loyce’s small business that Loyce could then give to others in need. I thought it was a great idea and did the same for a few other scholars. The results have been astounding. Our hearts are overflowing. If you want to know how $20 can transform lives in Tanzania…. read on.

LOYCE CHEJA

“By blessing others I have experienced the great joy of giving. I am now more connected to my community as I have earned a sense of cooperation and trust with people I did not know before. I want to work harder than ever so that I may have something to give. And even if I do not have money, I can share my time, ideas and energy.”

Loyce Lucas Cheja and her auntie with whom she is running her small store business. CLICK HERE to see Loyce’s roadside stand where she sells her wares.

Loyce Lucas Cheja and her auntie with whom she is running her small store business. CLICK HERE to see Loyce’s roadside stand where she sells her wares.

Loyce, 20, lost both of her parents in a motorcycle accident when she was just 11 years old. Following the accident Loyce and her five brothers and sisters lived with their grandmother in the Tabora region of Western Tanzania. Her grandmother wanted to sell Loyce off for brideprice into marriage to avoid having the burden of caring for her. To escape early marriage Loyce ran away to town to work as a housegirl. Four years later, after her grandmother passed away, Loyce returned home to live with her older sister, who was married by then, and four younger siblings. Her older sister was able to help Loyce complete primary school, but she died when Loyce was 16 years old. At that time Loyce was left alone to care for her four younger siblings. To earn money to pay for their basic needs, Loyce sang gospel songs with a singing group, taught singing lessons, and sold fried groundnuts. She then went to her primary-level teachers and begged for them to help her continue her education. They were able to pool together enough small funds for Loyce to attend the Tabora Girls Government Secondary School, even though she often did not have books, school supplies or the appropriate uniforms. While at school Loyce was elected to serve as Class Monitor, Head Prefect and Choir Master. In October 2019, Loyce graduated Form 4 (10th grade) top of her class. We chose Loyce to be one of our new Unite A-Level Scholars in early 2020, and she is now an active and beloved member of our Unite family. During this time of coronavirus when all the schools are closed, Loyce has used her small business interest-free loan from Unite to start a small food market. With each $20 installment, Loyce is able to gift food packages, which include highly nutritious baobob fruits, rice, sugar, beans, cooking oil, matches and more (enough to feed a family of four for one week)… to at least three people in need.

THREE OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE BEEN BLESSED BY LOYCE: Naomi Makoye, 12, who has never been to school and spends her days working the fields as a day laborer and her evenings smashing rocks for people in need of stones for building projects — all to he…

THREE OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE BEEN BLESSED BY LOYCE: Naomi Makoye, 12, who has never been to school and spends her days working the fields as a day laborer and her evenings smashing rocks for people in need of stones for building projects — all to help pay the rent for the single room in which she lives in with her mother and six “irresponsible”brothers; Elizabeth Lameck, an orphan for whom Loyce is caring along with Loyce’s four younger brothers and sisters; and Esther Ntimba, a single mother of four children who was abandoned by her husband.


JOHN JOHN MASHIMBA

“Blessing others with rabbits has filled my heart with the joy of charity. Many elders now see me as a good example — responsible and determined — and they are instructing other youths to pay attention and learn from me.”

John John,17, is from the Mwanza District of northwestern Tanzania. His father died in a road accident when John John was just a baby leaving his mother to care for him and his four older siblings. His mother has no education or job so she sent John John to live with his grandfather who was able to get him through primary school using his pension. John John finished primary school with all As and was accepted to attend the top government lower-secondary (7th - 10th grades) school for boys, Kibaha Boys School. At Kibaha, John John was elected to serve as Class Monitor and Health Secretary. While at Kibaha, John John started a weekend jogging club to support the students’ health. He also started a club to prevent and combat“the killing disease of we Africans—corruption.” His anti-corruption club is now successfully rolled out in 12 schools. John John also started a campaign to cut back the bush around his school to help prevent the spread of malaria, and he served as a member of the school’s United Nations Youth Club. John John graduated Form 4 (10th grade) from Kibaha in October 2019. However, his grandfather has since passed and his mother is too poor to help him with his education, so we have accepted John John into our Unite Scholar Program. Now, as a Unite Scholar, John John is thriving and participating in our many online study groups. He is also using this time at home during coronavirus to grow his rabbit business. Click HERE to learn more.

Above: John John sits with Edgar Gervas and his family. Edgar’s father died years ago in a road accident leaving him as the “man of the house” to take care of his mother and two younger sisters (right). Edgar’s mother sells fruits to try to earn mon…

Above: John John sits with Edgar Gervas and his family. Edgar’s father died years ago in a road accident leaving him as the “man of the house” to take care of his mother and two younger sisters (right). Edgar’s mother sells fruits to try to earn money for her family. However, she was born with one leg shorter than the other, which often causes her too much pain to walk. When this happens, Edgar must drop from school and do his best to provide for the family. John John blessed Edgar with two rabbits and is visiting Edgar weekly to make sure he cares for the rabbits properly.


Lazaro Frederick Lazaro

Lazaro, 19, is the first of four children born to peasant farmers in the coastal region of Tanzania. Lazaro’s father is an alcoholic and physically abusive to the family. He has always tried to make Lazaro drop from school, drink alcohol with him, give up on his dreams and just work in the fields. Yet Lazaro has remained steadfast in his commitment to education and learning. Lazaro attended lower secondary school (7th - 10th grades) at a government school. During those years, Lazaro lacked the most basic supplies (books, uniforms, stationaries) and had to walk more than an hour to and from school each day. Lazaro faced extreme hunger and exhaustion, and with no electricity at home, he was never able to study after dark. Yet somehow Lazaro managed to perform extremely well, and he was elected to such leadership positions as Class Monitor, Academic Prefect and the Discipline Master of the Tanzania Youth Catholic Student Group. Lazaro also received certificates of “Best Student”in Chemistry and Mathematics. Lazaro graduated Form 4 in October 2019 with As in all his subjects, and he earned the extremely-difficult-to-achieve Division 1 on his Form 4 National Leaving Exam. Lazaro was then chosen to join our Unite A-Levels Scholars Program and will begin school again with the rest of our scholars once this coronavirus pandemic has passed. Lazaro used his interest-free loan from Unite to start a small business selling corn flour (maize). Last month he traveled to the nearest large town to buy maize in bulk a wholesaler, and he is now selling the maize in smaller quantities to local people in his village who cannot travel during this pandemic. With each $20 purchase from Unite, Lazaro is able to bless three people with enough maize to feed their families of four for a week. About this opportunity to “extend his blessings,” Lazaro writes: I would like to dedicate my sincere thanks for your support and more lovable heart that you have given to me and my community. May God bless all you are doing.

THREE OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE BEEN BLESSED BY LAZARO: Thomas Kamgusha, who suffers from leprosy; Christina Peter, a disabled mother of three young children who was abandoned by her husband; and Emmanuel Mandago, who was left permanently disabled afte…

THREE OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE BEEN BLESSED BY LAZARO: Thomas Kamgusha, who suffers from leprosy; Christina Peter, a disabled mother of three young children who was abandoned by her husband; and Emmanuel Mandago, who was left permanently disabled after a motorcycle accident and is now struggling to provide for his five young children.

TO SEND $20 (OR MORE) TO ANY OF OUR 40+ UNITE SCHOLARS TO HELP THEM SUCCEED IN THEIR SMALL BUSINESS VENTURES AND BE ABLE TO EXTEND THEIR BLESSINGS TO THOSE IN EVEN GREATER NEED, DONATE HERE.

Our Unite Scholars WON the Planet 911 Youth Earth Video Competition

We are thrilled to announce that our Unite Scholars’ video, featuring our scholar, actor & environmental activist Luther Kavishe, WON the social media prize in the Planet 911 film challenge for Earth Day 2020.

Planet 911, a Global Initiative of Creative Visions and EarthXfilms, is an international call to action to youth across the world using film, arts, music and media as a way to protect the future of the planet. Planet 991engages over 20 million youth globally in creative activism. This year, our Unite Scholars’ film won one of three grand prize awards that includes a $1,000 cash prize that will be used to grow our tree planting campaign to reforest and replenish degraded lands in Tanzania. Our deep and heartfelt gratitude to all those who voted in support of our campaign!

Our deep and heartfelt gratitude to all those who voted in support of our campaign!

Something quick, easy and FREE that YOU can do to make a difference: VOTE to help us plant trees

There is a magic machine that sucks carbon out of the air, costs very little and builds itself. It’s called a tree. It is a tool we can use to repair our broken planet.

~Greta Thunberg 

Unite Founder & Director Anne Wells planting trees in Tanzania

Unite Founder & Director Anne Wells planting trees in Tanzania

As we “shelter in place,” thank God for the ability to breathe deeply, and do all we can to help minimize the devastation of this Covid19 pandemic, many of us are feeling helpless to really make a difference in the lives of those in greatest need. ONE THING we can do, EVERY DAY THROUGH APRIL 8th (Planet911’s judgement day) is to support our Unite Hummingbird Campaign in Tanzania through which our scholars and teammates are PLANTING TREES to COMBAT CLIMATE CHANGE. Please…

CLICK HERE & CLICK VOTE.

Easy peasy. The submission that receives the most votes will be eligible to win $1,000 from PLANET911 to grow their project! Please VOTE and help make our scholars’ Unite Hummingbird Campaign a winner. They have all worked so hard (as you can see in the series of 60-second videos below) and they are all so excited to be part of this global campaign to protect and preserve our precious planet. Thank you!

A society grows great when people plant trees in whose shade they shall never sit.

-Greek Proverb.

Unite’s Hummingbird Campaign is led by Unite’s Volunteer Coordinator & Special Projects Manager Clara Ngowi. An Environmental Scientist from the University of Dodoma, Clara is wildly passionate about conservation, reforestation and volunteerism. She began our Unite Hummingbird Project project by traveling to Morogoro, Central Tanzania, from Dar Es Salaam to purchase quality seedlings from the Tanzania Tree Seed Agency (TTSA). She and teammates Joan Mnzava and Rhoda Lugazia then gathered our Unite Scholars living in the Dar district (including Luther Kavishe who is featured in Unite’s Planet911 video above) to prepare the soil and plant seeds in polyethylene bags, which enable the growth of fibrous root systems. To date, our team has planted more than 600 seedlings and our plan is to replant those seedlings with and around such community partners as schools, hospitals, dispensaries, play grounds, churches, etc. in June when the seedlings have matured. If our team wins the Planet 911 Wake Up Call Youth Challenge (which once again requires everyone we know to VOTE once a day everyday now through April 8th), we will use the funds to plant thousands more trees on behalf of the greater community.

Clara Ngowi in a tree nursery with seedlings ready to plant. For our Unite Hummingbird Tree Planting Campaign, Clara choose a variety of tree species including fruit trees (mango, lemon, orange, passion, banana, papaya, guava) as well as trees for s…

Clara Ngowi in a tree nursery with seedlings ready to plant. For our Unite Hummingbird Tree Planting Campaign, Clara choose a variety of tree species including fruit trees (mango, lemon, orange, passion, banana, papaya, guava) as well as trees for shade, timber, decoration, medicine (Moringa), energy (for charcoal), prevention of soil erosion, and more.

Through Unite’s Hummingbird tree planting campaign, we are now part of worldwide movement to combat climate change, reduce deforestation and water scarcity, and restore the natural balance of ecosystems. Planting trees makes us feel connected, alive and happy.
— Clara Ngowi

Did you know…?

Click HERE to see a video of our Unite Scholars “Hummingbirds” preparing the land. Click HERE to see our Unite Scholars planting the tree nursery and preparing the polyethylene bags, and click HERE to hear a few of our Unite Scholars share a bit about what they learned.

Our vision for the entrance to Unite’s new tree nursery.

Our vision for the entrance to Unite’s new tree nursery.


Unite’s Organic Garden

In December 2019 a few of Unite’s “original” scholars and teammates came together under Clara’s leadership to prepare and plant a organic garden. Our goal was to teach our students about proper farming techniques so they can help grow food for their families and to provide free vegetables and fruits to impoverished, sick and hungry community members. Our Unite garden now includes seedbeds with okra, collard green, celery vegetables and pumpkin vegetables as well as banana and fruit trees and more. Each week project manager Clara Ngowi tends, harvests and re-plants our garden. Unite’s garden is now feeding FOR FREE dozens of children and staff at the nearby Elite Dignity Nursery School as well as widow women enrolled in Unite’s Mjane Jasiri Brave Widow program. Clara is also harvesting some vegetables to sell in order to pay the salary ($25 a month) of the guard/night watchman who protects the gardens from animal and human thieves. Click HERE to see a video of our Unite team’s garden planting day.


Deforestation and erosion is devastating communities in Tanzania. In 2017, Tanzania recorded one of the highest deforestation rates in East Africa. The Tanzanian government is encouraging widespread tree planting campaigns to prevent the country fro…

Deforestation and erosion is devastating communities in Tanzania. In 2017, Tanzania recorded one of the highest deforestation rates in East Africa. The Tanzanian government is encouraging widespread tree planting campaigns to prevent the country from turning into a desert.

A Story About Visiting Mama Murassa in Dar Es Salaam

She casually perched her 5’4” stocky frame high on pointed boulder at the edge of the dirt road and waived her arms above her head to get our attention. She wore her new bright red t-shirt with the word UNITE printed in bold white lettering across her ample busom and a coral-colored hand-made skirt that revealed two swollen ankles and dust-covered bare feet. 

With no street signs, house numbers or even clear roads in this sprawling neighborhood on the outskirts of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania’s largest city of more than 4 million people constructed along the shores of the Indian Ocean, we would never have found Mama Murassa has she not ventured out to the edge of this dense human squalor to flag us down.

I had been in Tanzania for less than 32 hours this trip and visiting Margaret, or Mama Murassa as she is referred to in the Tanzanian tradition of calling every mother Mama followed by name of her first born child, at her home was at the top of my agenda. The day before I had finally met Margaret in person, alongside the other widows who have received grants from our Unite The World With Africa Foundation’s Mjane Jasiri “Brave Widow” program to launch small businesses.

With Unite teammates and two of the women enrolled in our Widow Women’s Program. Margaret, a.k.a. Mama Murassa, is on the far right.

With Unite teammates and two of the women enrolled in our Widow Women’s Program. Margaret, a.k.a. Mama Murassa, is on the far right.

As the founder director of Unite The World With Africa Foundation and co-creator of this Brave Widows program with my teammates, I had of course already read about Margaret and each of our 10 “Brave Widow” women. They had been interviewed extensively by Anty Marche and Rhoda Lugazia, Unite’s Brave Widow’s program director and manager. Each applicant to this program required close and careful consideration, and choosing these initial “winners” was not easy: All widows in Tanzania face extraordinary hardships. Most are ostracized by their communities and left totally isolated. A widespread belief in witchcraft and voodoo perpetuates the ignorant idea that the women themselves are responsible for their husbands’ deaths. Any family property is immediately claimed by the husbands’ relatives after his passing leaving the women alone with their children and no home, no employment, no rights and no recourse to reclaim their land or property. So while I shouldn’t have been surprised when Mama Murassa began to speak, I still could not maintain my composure as I listened to her quietly share her story. Tears streamed down my face, and hers, and every face in our circle.

As a teenager Margaret had dropped from school due to her family’s inability to afford school fees, and she was married off to a man who was a terrible drunkard and extremely abusive. She suffered regular rapes and beatings, and yet successfully delivered two of his children. Over the years Mama Murassa tried her best to keep the peace and protect her children from their father’s explosive rage and fury. However one day when the children were young, he locked Margaret and the children inside their home, poured kerosene around the building’s exterior, and lit the house on fire. Miraculously Mama Murassa and her children were rescued by neighbors who heard their screams. They may have survived their physical injuries from that fire, yet it was in the hospital the next day when Margaret learned that she was HIV+. A few weeks later her husband, the same man who tried to burn Margaret and their children alive, took his own life.

*** 

On this day, upon seeing Margaret gesticulating wildly to our car from her stance up upon her rock, our driver Moody jerked his rusty old mini-van towards her and without warning dropped the vehicle’s left side, my passenger side, deep into a ditch of standing water. Mama Murassa leapt forward, sunk her bare feet deep into the muddy water, leaned into my window, grabbed my sweaty white face in her calloused black hands, and planted a huge kiss on my check. “KARIBU SANA!!!” She said loudly. “You are most welcome.“

“Asante sana Mama,” I replied with a giggle. “Thank you so much Mama.”

I opened my passenger door, steadied myself and leapt over the vast malaria breeding ground into the crowd of gawking strangers who were gathering around our stuck vehicle. I grabbed Margaret’s hand in mine, and together we started to climb the path, over rocks and gulleys, snaking our way in-between homes made of cement, mud and dung, passing cows tied to trees, steering clear of barking watch dogs and being careful not to trip over the many chickens that kept skirting back and forth across our path. My five teammates clamored along behind us. 

Our trek took only about 20 minutes but in the 100 degree heat and 80% humidity it felt like hours. Finally, Mama Murassa stopped, smiled big and said “tuwa hapa.” “We are here.” She then reached her hand deep into her brassiere to pull out a key to unlock the padlock securing her tin gate. “Asante” we chimed one by one as we followed Mama Murassa through her gate and into the tiny compound where she and her two children and three grandchildren live alongside one other family. Outside the block home was a single pit latrine surrounded by three cement walls erected for privacy and no roofing, just open sky. By the latrine, on the side of the house was a single door that opened to a inside standing area flanked by two more doors, each of which were covered with colorful kanga materials. One door for each family.

Inside, Mama Murassa’s door was one small room. A full-sized bed filled most of the space. At the foot of the bed were two small sofas alongside a tiny table on which was a doilie and a waterless vase stuffed with plastic flowers. The small strip of walking space between the bed and the side wall was clean and well swept. The couches were covered with sparkly silver plastic material. Margaret had clearly prepared for our arrival. 

The ceiling roof was made of metal sheets, and looking up I could see streams of light from the afternoon equatorial sun shining between cracks and openings. What did she do when it rained I wondered? The monsoon showers had been flooding these villages for weeks.

My team and I had, in keeping with the Tanzanian tradition of gift giving, brought Mama Murassa kilos of maize, rice and beans; long bars of multipurpose soap; and litres of cooking oil. We also brought her box of elegant batik materials which she could use to make clothes to sell in her shop, a shop she started with grant money awarded to her from Unite’s Brave Widows program. With each item she pulled from our oversized shopping bags, we all sang a traditional Swahili gift-giving song and Mama Murassa danced around in place with delight, holding each gift above her head and kissing its packaging at least once. 

With Mama Murassa and one of the new batik fabrics we brought her as a gift.

With Mama Murassa and one of the new batik fabrics we brought her as a gift.

Finally I decided that our visit was over, but when I stood to launch our exit procession Mama Murassa held up her hand motioning me to stop. She then smiled bright and leaned down to the floor to pull out from under her bed a thermos and six brand new glasses. She proceeded to pour for each of us a full glass of fresh fruit juice that she had made that morning using papaya, mango, banana and pinapple. We all “oohed” and “aaahed” over how delicious her juice tasted, and she beamed with pride. Our Brave Widows Program Manager Rhoda had told me Margaret’s famous juice and how she was successfully hustling it all over town.

Our afternoon thirst quencher was a critical element of Margaret’s livelihood, and I knew that these new glasses cost her more than she would make in a month. Even though we as Unite will continue to support Mama Murassa with grants, interest-free loans and educational programs to help her grow her fledgling juice business and tiny seamstress shop, I desperately wanted to open my wallet to repay her for the glasses, to purchase more, to give her money to repair her roof, to build a proper cover for her outdoor latrine, to purchase a storeroom full of fruits for her to use make her amazing juice for months to come, and so SO much more. But not only would such a move be unfair to all the other women enrolled in our Brave Widow’s Program (and to the scholars enrolled in our Unite Scholars & Mentorship Program — all of whom have their own world’s of crushing needs), that is not what Unite is all about. Unite’s work is to work alongside and with extraordinary individuals to help them make it on their own and achieve independence and self reliance. So, instead of handing Margaret a wad of cash in hopes of easing a bit of her seemingly endless burdens, I just embraced her one last time and repeated “asante sana, asante sana” “thank you, thank you” over and over, again and again.

I left that amazing woman’s home feeling inspired, humbled and a bit guilty.

Mama Murassa’s gifts had far exceeded my own. 

 

Introducing the "Kit Merriman" Unite Scholars

EDUCATE A GIRL AND SHE WILL CHANGE THE WORLD.
— Girl Rising
Zainabu Mjanja 4546.jpg

Two months ago, Kit Merriman, the mother of Unite Founder & Director Anne Wells and Board Member Kim Merriman, passed away after a long and valiant battle against metastatic breast cancer. Kit had a heart for educating girls in need so a scholarship fund for girls was created in Kit’s name to enable highly talented-yet-impoverished girls admission into our competitive Unite Scholars & Mentorship Program.

Today, thanks to the generous contributions of nearly 200 individuals who loved and admired Kit, we have raised just over $44,000 for this fund. This truly extraordinary outpouring of support has enabled us to admit and provide comprehensive support for 11 girls in need. Unite will support these “Kit Girls” for the next two years through their A Levels, which is Form 5 and Form 6 (~11th and 12th grades). We will also provide them mentoring and extensive life skills and leadership trainings. We are committed to doing all we can to support these “Kit Girls,” and ALL our Unite Scholars across Tanzania, and help them achieve success inside and beyond the classroom.

CLICK HERE to read report that introduces each of these 11 "Kit Girls" and outlines elements of our sponsorship program. Our program director Anty Marche has already told these girls that they have been chosen for this scholarship. To say that they and their families are ecstatic and overjoyed is an understatement. CLICK HERE to listen to a 15-second voice clip of one woman's response when Anty told her that her niece has been accepted. 

Our sincerest thanks to every person who helped make this miracle possible. As they say in Tanzania…

Education is liberation! 

I fly for Tanzania next week. I will meet all of these "Kit Girls" in person, and I will also meet dozens more of the new students who we are accepting into our 2020 Form 5 Class of A-Level Scholars. Currently we are planning on taking 30 new students in total; however, if we raise more funds in the next few weeks and months we will take on even more scholars. Every dollar raised is invested directly into this program. Our commitment is to grow our Unite Scholars Program into a brand that is internationally-recognized for honesty and integrity, confidence and creativity, diligence and determination, quality and consistency and world-class performance. If you would like to make a tax-deductible donation to help support our Unite Scholarship Fund, please click HERE.

***

Thank you to everyone who has honored my mother in this kind, generous and thoughtful way. I believe that we are making her proud. May her spirit live in through our love & service for the greatest good of all. 

With love & gratitude,

Anne 

New Unite Scholar Khadija introduces us to her family and home.

New Unite Scholar “Kit Girl” Zainabu Ally introduces us to her family and her home,

Here, a 60-second video from a recent Unite Scholar Mentor Training.

Here, a clip of current Unite Scholars volunteering to build an organic garden to help feed widows and children in need. Volunteerism is an important element of our Mentorship program.

The inaugural Unite Scholars Symposium has been CANCELLED.

LETTER TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE INTERNATIONAL UNITE SCHOLARS SYMPOSIUM, SENT 9.26.19

Dear Distinguished Speakers, Guests, Scholars, Teammates & Friends, 

On behalf of the board and beneficiaries of Unite the World with Africa Foundation Inc., I want to extend my sincerest gratitude to each one of you for your willingness to attend and participate in our inaugural Unite Scholars Symposium, which was to be held in Dar es Salaam in October 5th at the Ramada Resort.

It is with great disappointment that I am cancelling this event. I am sure that you all are aware that for a number of weeks now there has been an international conversation about a possible death from Ebola in Dar es Salaam as well as a number of subsequent suspected cases. Yesterday the Wall Street Journal newspaper released the article WHO Seeks Answers on Suspected Ebola in Tanzania, which now leaves us no choice but to cancel our travels for the safe of all involved. Clips of the article include:

  • “...international public-health officials suspect... a spate of cases of the virus.”

  • Lawrence Gostin, director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University, said he believes “there is credible evidence of Ebola cases in Tanzania.”

  • WHO member states such as Tanzania are obligated under international health regulations to report suspected cases of Ebola to the WHO. The agency’s guidelines for diagnosing the illness also recommend secondary testing of samples at an outside, specialized laboratory—a step the Tanzania government has refused.

  • No one is willing to speak publicly about what is going on,” the official said. “Even our staff in Tanzania have been unable to get any details from their government colleagues given their concerns about prosecution.”

While our hope and prayer is that the media has this all wrong and that, in fact, there is no Ebola in Tanzania, this uncertainty and suspicion has created a fear-based hysteria that is now too pervasive and powerful to ignore. 

***

For years, Unite has been my platform through which to bring people together across cultures and disciplines to love and support one another and to collaborate in the creation and development of original, innovative solutions to some of the world’s most pressing problems. Ours is a network of people who embrace their duties as stewards of Mother Earth and caretakers of humanity. Having all of you extraordinary individuals come together for this Symposium was, for me, truly a dream come true. Not only were we joining together to support our Unite Scholars in their personal and professional development, we were coming together to align ourselves and seek out active ways to support one another in our individual and combined efforts to serve our world. While my personal commitment is to choose courage over comfort, there are more people involved and we have a responsibility to our families and communities. I hope you all can understand this extremely difficult decision.

As the Executive Director of Unite The World With Africa Foundation, a USA-based not-for-profit, I spend most of my time (when I am not traveling to Tanzania) fundraising. I am always asking friends, family, acquaintances and complete strangers to give money, to travel with Unite to Tanzania, to HELP. And while most people run from me (sad, but true), some do not. There are a few precious souls who do give their time, talent and hard-earned dollars to Unite to help fuel our work to alleviate human suffering and create viable opportunities and healthy outcomes for impoverished youth and women across Tanzania. Each and every one of these supporters put their complete in our Unite team. 

In recent years Unite has been spending large amounts of money to sponsor a number of talented-yet impoverished youth to study in university; however, there have been questions around the cost/benefit of these investments. As the job market grows increasingly competitive, in Tanzania and all around the world, we know that in order to succeed in life post-graduation, these young people need to (in addition to being book smart) be able to differentiate themselves and connect effectively with the world around them. And there are few things that employers want, need and value more than employees who can deliver sustained value over time and who can master the “soft skills” of professionalism—punctuality, accountability, conscientiousness, honesty, creativity problem-solving, resourcefulness, flexibility, excellent written and oral communication skills, etc.

If Unite spends the majority of our funds on a handful of bright students who are not ultimately well prepared for success, have we done our donors a disservice? Unite’s job is to show our donors measurable impact and lasting results. Our Unite Scholars Mentorship Program was designed to address this issue by connecting our Scholars with trained Mentors who are working with them on how to prepare and execute creative and compelling presentations; how to arrange and succeed in informational and formal interviews; how to assess and manage their own strengths and weaknesses; how to be reliable, dependable and key members of a powerful and effective team; and so much more. This Symposium was a cornerstone of this program, and for many months our Scholars have been developing, refining and practicing their presentations with their Mentors. This has been an intense (and often uncomfortable) process for many of them; however, I know they will be devastated not to be able to present in front of you and shine their lights bright.

Please do let me know if you are interested in connecting with Anty Marche (our consultant and program director) and myself via phone, email and/or skype. We would still love to connect and learn more about you and your work and brainstorm ways that we may be able to work togther to make relatively-small investments unleash large potentials. 

Unite’s focus now is on growing our Unite Scholars Program into a global brand that is widely recognized for: Honesty and Integrity; Confidence and Creativity; Quality and Consistency; a commitment to Excellence; and, of course, World-Class Performance. To that end, we are seeking new partnerships to: 

(1) Create a pipeline of qualified Division 1 scholarship candidates for our A-Level sponsorship program [see criteria here];

(2) Develop additional support programs and initiatives in service to our Scholars’ growth and development;

(3) Explore new avenues through which we may “build bridges” between Americans and Tanzanians that will serve the greatest good of all (e.g. professional volunteer exchanges; international tree planting programs; mass media campaigns; school-to-school partnerships; etc.). 

Attached please find a Fact Sheet about Unite and a copy of the Unite Scholars Symposium Directory for your review. All of your contacts are included in the directory. I hope you will still reach out to one another. We are in this together. 

Lastly, I want to thank each one of you for committing to this Symposium as volunteers. No one is being paid to attend (which I am learning is quite unusual). Please know that I too am a volunteer. I am not paid any money to do any of Unite’s work. Instead, like all of you, I believe that with the priviledge of education and resources (of any size) comes great responsibility. Prayerfully I can contribute to creating a safer; healthier; more peaceful, loving, equitable and just world for us all. Time will tell, and I know we all will continue to do our best. 

We are Unite! Asante sana.

Yours always in service,

ANNE

Anne Wells
Founder & Executive Director
314.239.3997, anne@uniteafricafoundation.org
uniteafricafoundation.org

Our Mission: To provide opportunities for marginalized youth & women across East Africa to thrive & prosper by investing in quality education, leadership & business development programs.

***

Unite the World With Africa Foundation, Inc. is a Connecticut nonprofit corporation. EIN: 47-2329890