Who We Are

Friends of Imiliwaha help to improve the quality of life in Imiliwaha, Tanzania through education and healthcare.

Imiliwaha

Benedictine African Sisters of St. Agnes

Imili campus 13 label A

Where in Tanzania?

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Muhimbili National Hospital
Dar Es Salaam, TZ

Sister-Doctor Beatrice Kayombo

Since graduating from Benedictine University with a masters in public health, Sister Beatrice has pursued medical training, graduating from Poznan University Medical School in Poland in 2014 then to Dar Es Salaam where she successfully completed her oncology residency in Dec. 2020. She now works at the Mumbahili National Hospital in Dar Es Salaam.

Her medical expertise is of great use for her Sisters and the villagers in Imiliwaha. She collaborates on the new surgical center in Imiliwaha.
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Kilimahewa, TZ, a small village south of Dar Es Salaam.

Sister Fausta Mtweve, Principal

St. Gertrude Pre and Primary School
Sister Fausta arrived at this school in 2019, with phase 1 of the buildings complete, including classrooms and dorms, and proceeded to prepare for its opening.

For the first year, the school got started with the little children, kindergarten - first grade. Since then, they have expanded to include up to grade 4.

The covid-19 pandemic interrupted the momentum, disrupting income for many families, forcing them to pull their children from school. The loss of income also affected things like meals served to the students. Despite the short time of operation, the 4th graders took the national achievement exams and scored exceptionally high!

FOI enthusiastically supports St. Gertrude Pre-Primary School in Kilimahewa. We need your help to continue!
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Sumbawanga, a mid-sized city on the western edge of Tanzania, near Lake Tanganyika.

Sister Afra Mgwama, Principal

St. Gertrude Pre and Primary School
Sister Afra arrived in Sumbawanga in 2012, charged with converting a few abandoned buildings from the TZ government into a school that the Sisters would operate.

Friends of Imiliwaha supports this thriving pre-primary school now serving over 330 elementary school students. The stellar quality of education is shown by high test scores. FOI board members have enjoyed several visits to this vibrant campus.

The most recent addition to this vibrant campus is the new girls' dorm, now housing 64 students (including orphans) and their matrons. The government insisted the dorm be located adjacent to the school for safety reasons.

FOI proudly supports St. Gertrude Pre-Primary School in Sumbawanga. We need your help to continue!
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Imiliwaha, a small village near Njombe, TZ

Imiliwaha

African Benedictine Sisters of St. Agnes
The Sisters’ Motherhouse is located in this rural 1 FOI imili chapelvillage called Imiliwaha near Njombe. Within their campus, the Sisters have many trades, producing much of what they need to be self-sufficient, and generating income to support their community.

Also on this campus: primary and secondary school, vocational school, orphanage, and clinic.

The surgical center construction was completed and opened for patients in September 2021. FOI contributed solar panels for the surgical center and is building 2 houses for the doctors working at the center.

Friends of Imiliwaha (FOI) History

Friends of Imiliwaha NFP, formed in 2010, incorporated as an Illinois nonprofit organization in 2012, to support education and health care needs of the people of the Imiliwaha and specific ministries of the Benedictine Sisters of Imiliwaha, Tanzania.

This all-volunteer board focuses on specific projects identified by Sisters Afra, Beatrice and Fausta to best improve lives of children and adults in Imiliwaha and other areas of Tanzania served by the African Benedictine Sisters in Imiliwaha.
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Maria's Story

by Margaret Roth

Sister Afra and the Benedictine Sisters of St. Gertrude in Sumbawanga undertake outreach visits to impoverished households in the area.

During one of those visits they encountered Maria, who lived in a shack with her parents and siblings. Maria’s life seemed limited by the extent of her severe disabilities—malformed limbs, inability to speak—but this 11-year-old girl exudes much potential beyond her bedraggled appearance.

She was the third of six children of extremely poor farmers who had to work on their small plot all day just to eke out a bare existence for the family. Their two-room house in a nearby village was completely lacking in furniture and the family slept on mats spread on the dirt floor. They had only enough food for one meal a day. And they had a daughter who was severely disabled.

While the rest of the family was out working or going to school, they kept Maria at home, because they feared that in her helpless state she would be molested or sexually assaulted and possibly become pregnant by boys in the village. Maria could not speak or walk and had not had any schooling in her twelve years of life. Sr. Afra knew of many cases where disabled teenagers had become pregnant and had to give up the children they bore, because they couldn’t take care of them.

When the sisters met Maria, besides being unable to talk and walk, she was undernourished and looked much younger than twelve. She propelled herself by sitting on her legs and using her hands to get forward motion. She made sounds something like vowel sounds but she could not speak because she could not lift her tongue. Although Sister Afra has orphans and poor neighborhood children as boarders at her school, she is not equipped to take care of such a disabled child. She knew, however, that her parents could not leave Maria in the empty house all day. So, with the parents’ consent, she took a chance and brought her to the convent.
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Almost immediately, a small miracle occurred. The other young boarders accepted the new arrival wholeheartedly. They talked, read, and sang to her and helped her move around. Within days, Maria was interacting with her new companions and, with the sounds she could make, greeting them warmly when they came “home” from school which was just across the street.

However, challenges arose. Because Maria had not interacted with anyone outside of her family, she could only understand the local language which her parents and siblings spoke at home. She could not understand Kiswahili, the language used by the other children. She knew that her new companions were friendly and wanted to help her but she could not understand a word they said.

Not to worry, however, Sister Afra had a solution. She went back to the family and asked if Maria’s older sister, Anjelina, could come to the convent to care for Maria. Anjelina was fourteen but had only two years of school because she had been taking care of Maria at home. She can translate Kiswahili to Maria’s own language and let her know what her companions are saying to her. The sisters pay her for taking care of Maria and she turns over the money to her parents who come regularly to visit their two daughters at the convent.

But Sister Afra faced another challenge. Maria could not get off the floor and could only move around by using her hands. She needed an expensive customized wheelchair which the convent did not have. The third challenge facing Sister Afra is seeking a doctor to evaluate Maria’s condition and determine whether surgery would give her the ability to speak.

Sister Afra developed a plan for the two sisters. Maria, who can now voice a few more sounds and write some letters, is obviously intelligent. Maria entered school in 2019. With medical help and a wheelchair, she has a chance at a bright future.

Anjelina learned practical skills like sewing and small animal husbandry, but she also showed aptitude for learning, so she was enrolled in school. She graduated from seventh grade and was accepted into the secondary school run by Sister Afra's community in Imiliwaha. Friends of Imiliwaha provided a scholarship to cover her tuition, room and board, and living expenses.

Maria is very blessed to have Sister Afra, other Benedictine Sisters, and a community of young children to be her helpers and guides in finding her way to as normal a life as possible. With a wheelchair and specialized medical help, she can look forward to a better life.

UPDATE (11/21) - Maria is now 14. She still lives at the convent and attends class, supported by her school friends. Anjelina, now 16, is enrolled in the secondary school in Imiliwaha, with her sights on becoming a dentist.

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