Counselling street beggars, plantation workers and the
handicapped
The Jamii Bora Tumaini programme provides counselling and encouragement to the poorest
of the poor and has concentrated on the street beggars in Nairobi since 1999. The
Tumaini programme also targets landless plantation workers since 2001 and the
handicapped since early 2002.

15 social workers are actively encouraging, counselling
the most desperate among the poor, the street beggars. The social workers convince the
beggars that it is possible to get out of even the worst kind of poverty. The Jamii
Bora social workers know what they are talking about, because all of them were once
street beggars themselves. Even the Manager of the programme was once a beggar in the
streets. That is probably one of the secrets behind the formidable success rate of the
Tumaini programme. 3 social workers are working with the plantation workers and 2 with
the handicapped.
The method of work is the same as with the street beggars. The social workers working
with the plantation workers were all plantation workers themselves and the social
workers working with the handicapped are all handicapped themselves. – Our social
workers are extremely effective in spreading the Good News that it is possible to get
out of even the worst kind of poverty and misery.
The Tumaini programme:
- gives even the most desperate a new dignity and self esteem;
- strengthens the people's own capacity and helps them see and understand their
own potential to help themselves get out of their misery;
- is unique in many aspects - never before in Kenya have beggars been organised in
effective self-help groups to get themselves out of poverty;
(d) helps street children in a sustainable way by helping their mothers out
of the streets. Each mother that gets out of the streets is able to take care of her
own 4-6 children for many years, thus with the same money that you can help one child
for one year it is possible to assist 5 children for 10-15 years.
A Home and Education for orphans and street children
More than 90 Orphans and street children without guardians
have been given a home and education in our Jamii Bora home in Kitengela and 16 others
are supported with education in Elburgon, Nakuru and Kadjiado. These are street
children without parents and children of deceased members and they don’t have any
relatives who can take over the responsibilities of their deceased parents. 54
children are currently in primary school, 15 are in Secondary school. Our children are
doing very well in school and several are at the top of their class.
28 older children have gone through vocational training. 15 of the older street boys –
now young adults – were accepted as staff trainees in Jamii Bora and have graduated to
full staff members.