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Tanzania Fall Update

Tanzania, Amani School

The Amani school was able to reopen on June 29th after remaining closed for 3.5 months. As of now, there are no known cases or apparent symptoms of COVID-19 in the Pande community (northeastern Tanzania), where the school resides, although there is no longer government testing for the disease. Nevertheless, the community was not spared the economic impacts of the closures during the lockdown.
Published November 6, 2020, 2 min read.

The efforts of the administration and teachers at the Amani School during the lockdown was inspiring to the whole community. When closures began, they were the only school in the area to begin serving children remotely with homework. Teachers pooled their own resources to pay for some of the added transportation needs required. Before long, other schools we’re taking notice, and decided to take up the delivery of school materials to students, modeled after what the Amani School was doing.

222 students received remote education through the regular delivery, pickup, and grading of schoolwork and quizzes. The 115 most vulnerable families were also supported with regular food outreach, supporting over 800 individuals. Soap and masks were also distributed to families throughout the summer.

“I want you to know that who you are and what you are doing for christ matters more than you may tell yourself. It was not easy for most of the the schools in Tanzania, but you helped us pull through.”

Sarah Isaak, School Administrator

The High School

The land purchase for the new high school is now complete! The financing included some modest financial contributions from the local community. The survey for the high school is in draft form and is expected to be completed in November. Bishop Salalah of the Africa Inland Church of Tanzania joined Pastor Majama at the school on October 6 – celebrating the launch of the project and praying that it may bear many fruits in the community. The Bishop encouraged the students and the community to take good care of the gifts and spoke to the importance of family commitment – an important message in Pande, given the prevalence of broken homes.

Sports Evangelism

In Tanzania nearly everyone loves “football” (soccer), and sport has a unique capacity to bring people together. This fall, Hope Story and the Africa Inland Church of Tanzania initiated a soccer outreach for young adults in the Pande community. In a community where following Jesus can mean losing your parents, your spouse, or even your children, this outreach will engage young adults outside of the Amani School in mentorship and regular Bible study. We hope to foster an environment where individuals feel free from persecution and are supported in considering a relationship with Christ. The team pictured above had been dubbed “Amani United.”

Computer lab

Pictured here is the classroom built out of a shipping container in London, Ontario, by London Christian High (LCH) students and shipped, by boat, to Tanzania. It arrived over the summer and was recently roofed and hooked up to electricity. For most of these kids, it’s the first time they will learn on a computer. A heartfelt thank you to students at LCH for their tremendous work on this project and all the generous donors who made this possible!

About the Amani School

The Amani School began in 2008 as outreach on the East African coast and is one of only a few primary schools where the language of instruction is English – essential to success in high school, and beyond where instruction is in English. The school is now ranked among the top 10% in the country. Currently, over 300 children receive a quality education, lunch, agriculture & vocational training, and Christian mentorship. And as of January 2022, Amani has a new High School, meeting a critical need.