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100% of your donations go directly to Nusurat.

Nusurat is a student from Tanzania who is fully funded for this school year! Fund another student here.

$150 raised
$0 to go
Nusurat Cholobi
I live with my grandmother. My mother is a typist. I have one sister and no brothers. I felt happy and proud of myself when I performed better in my exams. I was happy because my family was proud of me and it made work harder to make them even happier.
It was difficult when my grandfather died. I was 10 years old. He died because of a brain cancer. It made me very sad. That is why I work so hard. I want to make sure that no one else suffers like that and I do not want others to cry like I did.
The memorable and happiest thing in my life was when I performed well in my national exams. I knew that I had the power and ability to do better in secondary school. My dream of life is to be a brain surgeon. I will achieve it by working hard in biology, physics, and chemistry and by finding more materials that will help me and also help others.
After I reach my dream, I will help my family by making sure that they stay healthy and I will help the community and WEF by providing school materials and stationery. If I had the power to change my country, I would change the health sector to make sure no one dies from diseases and that they have happy lives.

Birthday: 2007

Gender: Female

Favorite Classes: biology

Favorite Books: novel books

I Want to Be: surgeon

Hobbies: dancing

Family: mother, 1 sister, 1 grandmother

O-Level School: Lugalo Secondary School

Funding for Form 4 2024:
Tuition, Exams, Uniform   $150

TOTAL   $150
Funding for Form 3 2023: $150
Funding for Form 2 2022: $150
Nusurat's Journal
367 Entries
Hello family đź‘‹
I hope all of you are doing fine. At this moment let me share a story with you :

🌸 The Threads of Maisha

In the misty highlands of Ushoni, where mountains wore shawls of morning fog and rivers whispered lullabies to sleeping valleys, lived a young weaver named Maisha. The village was famed for its vibrant textiles, woven not just with threads but with memory—every fabric a tapestry of love, pain, laughter, and hope.

But Maisha wove differently. She chose pale tones—soft blues, muted greys, washed-out lavenders. Her creations didn’t burst with celebration; they whispered healing. The elders watched in silence as her hands worked—always quiet, always listening.

It was said Maisha hadn’t spoken in years. Not since the fire.

Years ago, a blaze had swept through Ushoni, devouring maize fields and homes, including Maisha’s family hut. She lost her parents to smoke and flame, and her voice to grief. The only thing that remained was her loom, half-burnt but upright. From that day onward, she wove silence into softness. And those who wrapped themselves in her cloths said they slept deeper, dreamed kinder, and cried less.


🔥 The Day Everything Tore

One harvest season, misfortune returned. A second fire—fiercer, unexpected—ravaged Ushoni. This time, it reached Maisha’s workshop. Her fabrics turned to ash, her walls crumbled, and the scent of smoke replaced that of wild jasmine in the air.

Villagers gathered to mourn their losses, their voices rising like sorrowful thunder. Yet Maisha did not cry. She wandered to the edge of the river, where charred leaves floated like dark petals. Sitting there, hands empty, she watched.

As dusk fell, a child approached—holding a shredded blanket, its once bright patterns faded and singed.

“Can you fix this?” the child asked, gently placing it in her lap.

Maisha ran her fingers across the weave. She didn’t nod. But that night, by moonlight and with trembling hands, she began to re-stitch—one thread at a time.


🌀 Stitching Stories

Word spread like wind. Soon others brought her pieces of what they had lost: a broken drumskin, a torn scarf, a burnt baby sling.

Maisha wove tirelessly. But this time, her patterns changed.

She stitched spirals to symbolize renewal, droplets for forgiveness, flames not for destruction but memory. Her muted tones grew brighter—sunrise orange, river green, ember red, twilight purple. The village saw their hopes mirrored in cloth.

What she created wasn’t just fabric. It was transformation.

Her shawls warmed grieving mothers. Her banners flew over rebuilt homes. Her cloth strips bound wounds and decorated newborn cradles. And slowly, the hush of sorrow turned into gentle hums of healing.


🕊 The Last Loom

Years passed. Ushoni blossomed again—not just in crops and buildings, but in spirit. Maisha aged quietly, never once regaining her voice. But her eyes still shone with listening.

One evening, as the sun spilled gold across the valley, Maisha sat by the river—loom before her, hands steady. From beneath a wrapped bundle, she pulled a shimmering thread—the last one she had saved, found years ago in the ash of her family’s home.

She wove through the night, and by dawn, a cloth emerged unlike any before. It held no distinct pattern, no familiar symbol—yet it glowed softly, pulsing like memory. Pale at first, it bloomed into hues never seen. Some said the fabric shimmered between emotions—between joy and sorrow, longing and peace.

She walked to the village square, placed the cloth gently at the center, and with a voice fragile but firm, whispered her first words in decades:

“This is ours. Carry it gently.”

Then she returned to the river’s edge, sat beside her loom, and closed her eyes. No one saw her again—but her cloth, now called The Heart Weave, became Ushoni’s treasure. A living story of quiet resilience.


🪷 Messages Threaded Through

- Healing doesn’t need sound—sometimes, silence carries the deepest compassion.
- Art transforms grief into legacy.
- Shared sorrow becomes strength when carried together.
- The softest hands can stitch the strongest futures.

Wish you all the best in your studies 💗❤️
Hello family
i have a lot to say but i can't finish all of them. I hope things on your side are going well but on my side m trying har to make them go well and accordingly. In this life just smile and say i m fine because nobody really cares do not remember the sad moment you had yesterday but enjoy the happy moment but you have today .

A wise person once sad both fruits grow on the same branch but one ripens while the other awaits its time . Nature reminds us that another ones success does not mean our failure , our moment will come too. Always remember to stay with people who can't take responsibilities for their actions and who make you feel bad for being angry at them when they do you wrong they make you more strong.

And always remember an umbrella can't stop the rain but it allows you to stand on the rain . Confidence may not bring success in life but it gives us the power to face challenges . Hard working is not a means of victory , but it gives hopes to accomplish our mission through our vision .

- ----- nusrat
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