Who We Are

 

logo_smWelcome to the Maji Mazuri  Website!

Through building cross-continental awareness we hope to bring a voice to the world’s poor; people who suffer because they lack the simple resources they need to escape the bondage of poverty and become self-sustaining individuals. Our goal is provide basic tools and critical assistance to help thousands of families improve their lives in a meaningful way and end the cycle of poverty.  Furthermore,  by enlisting a new generation of committed global citizens we want to create awareness and knowledge to serve as a catalyst for thousands to get involved in our quest to bring  more transformational opportunities to those  in the impoverished slums of Mathare Valley and beyond.

What is Maji Mazuri?


Maji Mazuri is a social economic development program created in 1984 by Wanjiku Kironyo and based in Nairobi, Kenya. The program was initially developed  to help women and children in Mathare Valley, the second largest slum in East Africa.

 

Mathare is a desolate place. People live in abject poverty with no functional utilities; no clean water, no sewage system or electricity. They live in shacks made of mud, bits and cardboard and rusty corrugated iron. Crime is rampant and the streets are permeated with drugs, prostitution and a lethal brew of illegal alcohol called Chang'aa.


Over 90% of the households are headed by single women, many of whom have been in abusive relationships and now engage in these illicit activities to survive.


Wanjiku Kironyo, a family marital therapist, began her work with a counseling center for women in the slums. The program has grown and is currently composed of six interrelated projects. The mission of Maji Mazuri is to help people to escape from the bondage of poverty, ignorance and myth and become fully developed individuals. The vision is to provide the foundation, education and support needed for the children, youth and families in Nairobi’s slums to become self-sustaining in terms of social, economic and spiritual well-being. Simply providing a home for orphaned children or telling the youth to use a condom will not solve the problem.

A holistic approach is needed and the solution involves working within the community. Programs must seek to address the root causes of poverty and help the community to recognize how poor behavioral choices directly result in the increased spread of HIV/AIDS. System wide changes must be effected if there is hope for ending the cycle. Each of Maji Mazuri’s projects is designed with the principle of holistic, community-based approaches to addressing socio-economic inadequacies.

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.


 

History

 

Wanjiku2

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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Team Blog Posts

  • Background
    I took a year off from school in between graduating from my undergraduate program and commencing law school. I had always wanted to travel, to experience another culture, and to help others, for I have lived and continue to live a very blessed life, indeed. I met with Kevin Corcoran,…




    Written on Saturday, 26 December 2009 22:52 in Taylor Harper
    Be the first to comment! Read 126 times

  • A Lesson in the Sunset
    A crimson hue melted across the western sky as the cool, crisp evening breeze grazed the back of my neck. Graciously, I moved a little closer to the fire. Martha, the school cook, was preparing the evening meal for the students of the Upper Matasia School. A young girl approached…




    Written on Saturday, 26 December 2009 22:45 in Taylor Harper
    Be the first to comment! Read 112 times

  • The projects...
    While appreciating the growth in each of the projects since then, of key note is Maji Mazuri Children’s Centre, Kasarani. We have watched as the children have transited from one level to the other, with enduring encouragement from the staff ...one example is a young man who came to the…




    Written on Saturday, 26 December 2009 22:44 in Janet Wambui
    Be the first to comment! Read 132 times

  • How it all started...
    On 5th January 2006 I walked into the Maji Mazuri Head office as a volunteer after responding to an ad in one of the local dailies... four years later, I can confidently say it was one of the best decisions I ever made... I have watched Maji Mazuri grow under…




    Written on Saturday, 26 December 2009 22:41 in Janet Wambui
    Be the first to comment! Read 130 times

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