December 30, 2024

Bees for economic independence in 2025

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In our beekeeping project(we reported), the next training camp for 18 participants of the UMOJA group took place shortly before Christmas at St. Walburg’s Hospital in Nyangao, conducted by Jackson Kizeze, Senior Field Assistant and Beekeeping Expert of the Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute (TAWIRI) . For five days, the women learned important beekeeping skills in theory and practice, received materials and built their own beehives. The aim of this training was to enable them to set up and maintain their own beehives in the forest and at home, and to buy or make the utensils needed for the business. Further support and training will follow. In October, Dr. Michael Fakharani, a surgeon and orthopaedic surgeon from Bremen, who actively initiated this project, also visited the stand and again reported on the positive effects of honey on wound healing. We wish the young beekeepers every success for the further development of their business model in 2025, so that they can become economically independent and feed their families.

 

 

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