Ancient ruins at Kilwa Kisiwani in Southern Tanzania. The United States Embassy Public Affairs Officer Ms. Marissa Maurer along with representatives from the Ministry for Natural Resources & Tourism and local dignitaries, celebrated the successful conclusion of a project to conserve ancient ruins at the Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara World Heritage Site. This project was implemented in partnership with the Tanzanian government’s Antiquities Division and the World Monuments Fund, with funding from the U.S. Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation. The project has preserved one of Tanzania’s most important heritage sites and created significant economic benefits for the people of Kilwa. The event was held recently at Kilwa Kisiwani. (Photo courtesy of the U.S. Embassy)
Along with local dignitaries and representatives from the Ministry for Natural Resources & Tourism,
U.S. Embassy Public Affairs Officer Marissa Maurer this week celebrated the successful conclusion
of the project to conserve ancient ruins at the Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara World Heritage
Site. This project was implemented in partnership with the Tanzanian government’s Antiquities
Division and the World Monuments Fund, with funding from the US Ambassadors Fund for Cultural
Preservation. The project has preserved one of Tanzania’s most important heritage sites and created
significant economic benefits for the people of Kilwa.
The heritage site of Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara is one of seven UNESCO World Heritage
Sites in Tanzania. In June 2014, in recognition of the successful conservation work undertaken by
the Antiquities Division and World Monuments Fund, the UNESCO World Heritage Committee
voted to remove Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara from the UNESCO List of World Heritage
in Danger. This international recognition is testimony of the tremendous efforts made towards
preserving the site, as well as the generosity of the American people in funding conservation efforts
in Tanzania.
The islands of Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara, which together make up the Kilwa Kisiwani
World Heritage Site, are among the most important heritage sites in East Africa, with standing
ruins dating back more than 800 years, and has the potential to become one of the foremost heritage
destinations in Tanzania. The overarching objective of the project is to create a framework for
balanced development, in which competing demands of tourism, economic development, social
change and heritage preservation are balanced for the benefit of all, ensuring the survival of the
monument for future generations.
The project commenced in September 2011, implemented by the Antiquities Division of the
Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism and the World Monuments Fund. From the beginning,
the project team sought to link preservation efforts to economic benefit, especially in the minds of
the islands’ residents.
The World Monuments Fund met with village elders to agree a framework
for employment, ensuring that the maximum number of local people were included in the workforce
especially women. A total of 600 Kilwa residents have been employed during the course of the project.
The ancient ruins on Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara are exceptional. On Kilwa Kisiwani, the
building known as Husuni Kubwa (or ‘large house’), which was built sometime between 1320
and 1333, and is the earliest and by far the largest and most sophisticated surviving major building
south of Somalia close by is the Great Mosque, which was founded in the 11th century, and by the
14th century was the largest and most sophisticated mosque south of the Sahara. Songo Mnara
contains the remains of 40 stone houses dating from the 14th
preserved and more archaeologically intact than any comparable domestic building in East Africa.
The Portuguese fort is one of few remaining Portuguese defensive structures in the region to 16th
century, some of which are better
kwa msaada wa watu wa marekani duh
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