History
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The Maji Mazuri Center was developed based on the work of the Program Director- Wanjiku Kironyo, a family marital therapist, who in 1984 set up office in the Mathare Valley and began counseling women. The women suffered from severe depression and other psychological syndromes caused by single parenthood in this impoverished setting. In addition to counselling, she realized the women needed economic empowerment and began to organize them into small economic groups, i.e. cooperatives, a prelude to the Micro Enterprise networks later established by Maji Mazuri. Thus women who had been through immense suffering including abusive relationships and imprisonment had social and economic support groups where they were able to not only survive but thrive by deriving strength from each other. |
In 1985, a Canadian woman called Rosalind committed herself to starting a small agency known as the Awareness Program. The purpose of that program was to create a cooperative inter-country partnership with Wanjiku’s office. In 1986, the Awareness Program secured grants from the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and provided the start up funds for Maji Mazuri Center. From its humble beginnings, Maji Mazuri Center’s projects have evolved and grown significantly. Initial funding was primarily received from the Awareness Program, but other sources of funds have been accessed over the years. The program is currently composed of six interrelated projects. The projects range from treating handicapped, abandoned and orphaned children to providing training for residents of the community to become self sufficient, to training the youth on HIV/AIDS awareness and having them spread the word in the community.



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