Due to colonial and post-independence attitudes, under-appreciation for local culture is sadly familiar. We are reversing that view by prominently displaying and educating on the rich Makonde, Makua, and Yao heritage. Seeing elders beaming with pride when they share their stories about the artifacts they find displayed. It is not uncommon to hear people say, “I didn’t think our culture was worth preserving. I must go home and tell people to stop throwing our elders things away.”
THE VALUE OF OUR MUSEUM FOR MTWARA
Honoring and Preserving the Local Heritage
Providing visual material to enhance school learning
With no funding for classroom visual aids the MaKuYa Museum provides artifacts, maps, activities, and games to enhance learning for students and all visitors. Unlike most classrooms, we are all about engagement, asking questions and being asked questions. if we don’t know the answer, we try to find out
Cross Generational Learning and Sharing
Formal education for young people has separated them from the stories and histories of their grandparents and culture. Most of their elders’ memories remain undocumented. We invite elders to share with the youth, and aspire to record their histories and memories before it is too late.
For these reasons and more we are seeking support to keep our efforts going.
MUSEUM PROJECTS
Cultural Collections
Hadithi Hadithi - Traditional Stories
Kuijua Jiografia - To Know Geography
Local Histories and Narratives
Collecting Local History From Elders
MUSEUM CONTENT
Domestic Life Artifacts
We have a large collection of artifacts representing the various aspects of life at home or in the community. These items play a part in dress, cooking, farming, hunting, fishing as well as births, marriages and death.
Music & Games
Music, dance, games and entertainment play a big roll in the traditional Makonde and Makua lives. We have a growing collection of games and instruments for our visitors to see, hear and even play.
Native and Introduced Foods
With the help of village elders we have amassed a collection of native foods, herbs and seeds found in the region. As well we explain through a “Yalitoka wapi?” “Where did it come from?” challenge to understand the introduction of non-native foods to Africa.
Masks and Carving
The Makonde people have a long tradition of carving, initially for the production of masks for performance. Contemporary carving grew from the wishes of foreign visitors which began centuries ago with Arabs and Portuguese using ivory and African Blackwood. These include a variety of figures, statues and useful objects.
Past Traditions of Beautification
Images taken from a 1908 expedition through the Mtwara region provide an invaluable opportunity for younger Tanzanians to see the famed traditions of face scaring, teeth filing, and lip piercing in the Mtwara region. Memories of these traditions are still represented in dance and art forms.
Discovery Center
In the Discovery Center we explore things connected to local and familiar realities: Reading maps, understanding natural phenomenon such as the moon, sun or a rainbow, the earth rotation, sea life and more.
MaKuYa Festival
The MaKuYa Traditional Culture and Performing Arts Festival was launched by ADEA in 2008 for the preservation, promotion, and perpetuation of the traditional performing arts in the Mtwara region of Tanzania.ADEA produced this event in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2014
Hunting and Fishing
As the peoples of southeastern Tanzania did not traditionally keep cattle; hunting, trapping and fishing were an essential part of their lives. Fishermen in the coastal regions made traps and ….).
Audio Devises
The use of audio devises has made our exhibits more accessible to a largely functionally-illiterate population. . GUIDE-ID of the Netherlands has generously agreed to let us continue to use their audio equipment without charge.