Tools for transformation in Tanzania
Disabled crash survivor discovers new talent in wood workshop
Photo: Elinaja (right) and other members of the Sawawa wood crafts team show off some of their handiwork
Elinaja’s life was changed forever when his motorbike was hit by a bus one day, causing him to lose his right leg. He couldn’t walk and he couldn’t work to support his wife and children. But now, he is working to support his family once again as part of a purposeful, friendly community.
Elinaja was an able-bodied man in his early 30s with a job, a wife and four children. One day as he was returning from work, his motorbike was hit by a bus as it veered off the road. His right leg was severely injured. After six painful weeks without improvement, the doctors advised amputation.
The months that followed were some of the hardest of Elinaja’s life. Unable to work, he stayed at home, struggling to move and to support his family. He helped care for their youngest daughter, but as time passed, his hope faded. With no income and no way to afford the £900 needed for a prosthetic leg, despair crept in.


Three years passed before Elinaja found a sponsor who helped him get a prosthesis fitted at the Usa River Rehabilitation Centre. He had already been in contact with SAFI (See Ability First International) Tanzania in search of training opportunities. SAFI, led by mission partners Ben and Katy Ray, offers people with disabilities from across East Africa the opportunity to gain new skills to earn a living.
On the day Elinaja received his new leg, he visited the SAFI office to show how he could now stand and walk with a single stick instead of heavy crutches. At the time, SAFI was looking for a new trainee to join the Sawawa group (one of 12 micro-enterprises that SAFI is setting up over the coming 18 months). Sawawa produces handcrafted wooden homewares.
A week later, Elinaja returned to begin his training with Doris, a skilled deaf carpenter, who had trained with SAFI just six months previously. He initially trained on the large standing lathe and seemed to have a natural talent for woodturning. Unfortunately, standing all day on his prosthetic leg was painful for Elinaja, and so he waited at home until a suitable solution could be found.

SAFI reached out to Tools For Solidarity, an organisation that supplies refurbished tools. By chance, they had just received a compact table-top lathe – ideal for Elinaja. He was soon called in and measured up for the new lathe so it could be set to the perfect height. Two months into his training, Elinaja is now producing his own range of wooden items – bowls, pots, honey dippers and light fittings.
Elinaja is so pleased to be part of a purposeful, friendly community at the centre and to have found work that not only supports him and his family, but also gives him a great deal of satisfaction as he uses a newly discovered talent. Please pray for Elinaja and the carpentry team as we look to raise funds to build a more spacious workshop further from the cafe.