Home>How We Work>Stories of Transformation>One $75 Loan Provides Hope for a Family, Self-Confidence to a Fifth Grader in Tanzania

Carolina was among the first women served by Five Talents' partner in Tanzania, the Mama Bahati Foundation (MBF). She now owns a soap-making business.

Hotmian's story begins with a failure. But as with many successful entrepreneurs, the failure merely gave her an opportunity to succeed.

"I can pay for school fees so my children can go to school. ...I won't keep any at home because I was kept at home and I don't want that." Leonie, third from the right in the middle row, Burundi

Selvi was too shy to join a Self-Help Group in her Indian village after the 2004 tsunami. Now, she is a group leader. “I have confidence. Now, I want to continue to help my village."

“Because of my loan group, my family is more united, and I have gained confidence and feel more secure.” Matilde Mayhua, Peru

“I don't know what would have happened if this program hadn't come. I wasn't able to buy enough food for my sons. Now, I am able to support them.” Natalana Ahok, Sudan

"I pray daily that the almighty God would guide me in all that I do, so that I can help my community and my family." Sarah, Sudan

One $75 Loan Provides Hope for a Family, Self-Confidence to a Fifth Grader in Tanzania

Twelve-year-old Atupenda hopes to become a teacher one day. This fifth grader attends school in Kilolo, Tanzania. Her favorite subject is English, and she plays netball after school with her friends.

Her mother, Atuitie, recently paid back her first loan of $75 to the Mama Bahati Foundation, a Five Talents microfinance partner based in Iringa, Tanzania. She used the loan to increase the inventory of her small vegetable store, which resulted in new customers and increased sales. The additional income for the family has given Atupenda a new sense of self-confidence.

“The loan has enabled our family to have better clothes to wear,” Atupenda said.

The Mama Bahati Foundation (MBF) currently has 740 clients. The average initial loan size is $54, and the average repayment rate is 99 percent. MBF was registered as a Tanzanian non-governmental organization (NGO) in February 2006, in order to provide microfinance services to women in, and around, Iringa. The project is named after a poor Tanzanian woman called Mama Bahati or “Mother of Chance,” who used a loan of $8 to break out of the cycle of poverty. The project is the idea of the former Archbishop of the Anglican Church of Tanzania Donald Mtetemela.

Because of the foundation’s work and her mother’s success, Atupenda is excited about the new possibilities open to her. Being able to pay for the education necessary to become a teacher is now more than a wish, it is a reality.

 

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