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Reuters
Reuters
Health
Nicky Woo

Tanzania's Zanzibar begins to register traditional healers

Infant Ahee Bom lays on a cushion in the hallway of his home in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 3, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

ZANZIBAR CITY, Tanzania (Reuters) - Zanzibar's traditional healers with their toolkits of herbs, holy scriptures and massages are being registered by authorities keen to regulate the practitioners who treat everything from depression to hernias.

About 340 healers have been registered since Zanzibar, a region of the east African country of Tanzania, passed the Traditional and Alternative Medicine Act in 2009.

Traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee, 56, massages three-month-old infant Abduli Juma in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 20, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

There are an estimated 2,000 more healers, or mgangas, hoping to register, said Hassan Combo, the government registrar at the council that records them. 

Traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee has already registered. She tends to patients at her busy clinic where women line up in the early morning sun cradling their sick children.

One family seeks relief for a child suffering from an umbilical hernia, scared that if they bring the child to hospital for surgery he will die. A pregnant woman who has repeatedly miscarried comes for reassurance, herbs and prayers that this baby will survive.

Traditional healer, Bi Mwanahija Mzee, holds four-week-old patient Mundhir Nasoor, in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 19, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

“People come here because I actually help them. I met many patients that went to hospital first and got no help or the medicine didn’t work,” said Mwanahija Mzee, 56.

"This is my job six days a week for more than 20 years so I do better, know more than them. Patients that come to me don’t die."

Mwanahija Mzee's parents were also traditional healers in Zanzibar, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean.

Hidaya Rayabu, 22, looks at her infant daughter hours after giving birth at Makunduchi Hospital in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 27, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

To be registered, mgangas must be aged at least 18, have at least three years of experience and have a recommendation letter from a trained mganga. A council of 11 members that can include birth attendants, respected healers, village elders and lawyers approve the applications each month. 

For photo essay, see https://widerimage.reuters.com/story/tanzanias-zanzibar-begins-to-register-traditional-healers

Traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee (C), 56, folds root medicine in a piece of paper to give to a mother who complains of her child's constipation in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

While the government does not try to dictate healers' methods, it tries to work with them on quality control, government registrar Combo said, for example ensuring plants used in medicines are of the same standard.

A group facilitated by the registrars office links doctors with traditional healers to give them some medical education on specific diseases like hypertension, diabetes and pregnancy. The mgangas share information with the doctors about patient statistics and needs, he said.

Traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee (C) checks the diaper of a child who was brought in for constipation in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

SUPERNATURAL SPIRITS

Some healers use herbs. Others use scriptures from the Muslim holy book, the Koran. Most use both. Belief in supernatural sprits like djinns features strongly.

Apprentice healer Salama chops roots to be doled out to patients at Bi Mwanahija Mzee's clinic, Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 6, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

Some healers, like Haji Mrisho, mainly give blessings to pregnant women to prevent their unborn babies being possessed by djinns. Others, like sheikhs at the Shifaa Herbal clinic, read the Koran to cast out the djinns blamed for many maladies.

Mwanahija Mzee uses a mix of massages, medicines from roots, herbs and leaves and Koranic verses, which may be written on a plate in red food coloring. The plate is then rinsed, and the water ingested as part of the medicinal regimen.

Some patients like Fatma Hamad say they trust traditional healers over the overcrowded, underfunded public hospitals where many feel their ailments are not treated properly.

An ornate tea service sits in a room recently renovated to film the YouTube channel of sheikh Salum, the founder of Shifaa Herbal clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, March 3, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

Fatawi Haji Hafidh, manager at Makunduchi Hospital, the second-largest government-run hospital on Zanzibar's main island, says overstretched doctors and nurses may not have the time to see patients or the diagnostic equipment.

Patients may also be unable to afford the medicine prescribed, or they may stop taking it before the course is finished, leading them to relapse and adding to their suspicion of government-run facilities, he said.

Many simply believe djinns are the problem. 

Roots and herbs sit on a table waiting to be cut into smaller pieces and given as medicine to patients at traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee's clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 5, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

Fatma Hamad took her 2-year-old daughter to hospital after one of the toddler's legs became paralyzed during a high fever. Unable to find the problem through X-rays, the hospital recommended she seek out a traditional healer.

Mwanahija Mzee massages the child and after a few appointments, her mobility is slowly improving. The mother has taken this as proof that the illness was caused by possession, “Must be a djinn, as Bi Mwanhija said," Hamad said.

A baby brought to traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee for help with a hair growth pattern looks at the camera in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo

(Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by Frances Kerry)

Murtazha Hamis, 11, brought in after suffering a stroke resulting in partial paralysis, does push-ups at traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee's clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 20, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee 56, prays in her bedroom in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
A woman screams as she is treated for what she believes is possession by supernatural sprits like djinns, while other women pray at the Shifaa Herbal clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 17, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Traditional healer Haji Mrisho speaks with pregnant patient Hidaya Rayabu, 22, at his office in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 9, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Patient files lie on shelves at Kidongo Chekundu Hospital, Zanzibar's only psychiatric ward in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, August 24, 2018. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Hidaya Rayabu (C), 22, laughs with her husband, Mohammed, who holds their six-day-old daughter Jamillah in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, March 4, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Traditional healer Sahihi Mrisho 67, holds medicinal roots in Makunduchi village, in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, August 26, 2018. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Women gather their things in preparation for departure after a Koranic recitation at the Shifaa Herbal clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 17, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
A sheikh tries to rouse a woman by pouring water on her neck in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 17, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Apprentice healer at Bin Rubea clinic Mohammed Saleh sits at his boss' dispensary waiting for customers in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, March 3, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Parents wait in the waiting room at Jang'ombe vaccination clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, March 4, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Low tide is seen in Jambiani village, Zanzibar, Tanzania, February 21, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Fatma Hamad holds her two-year-old daughter, Khadija, while examining her x-rays at Mnazi Mmoja government hospital in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 5, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Rooftops of houses are seen in Fuoni village, just outside Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 6, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Worn pages of the Koran used in bestowing blessings is seen at traditional healer Haji Mrisho's clinic, in Jambiani village, Zanzibar City, Tanzania, August 8, 2018. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee's daughter, Hawa Abdallah, sifts peas at their home in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
A sheikh at the Shifaa Herbal clinic holds onto a woman who is treated for what she believes is possession by supernatural sprits like djinns, in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, August 12, 2018. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Fatawi Haji Hafidh, manager at Makunduchi Hospital, the second-largest government-run hospital on Zanzibar's main island, poses for a photograph in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, August 21, 2018. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Traditional Healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee, 56, puts fresh leaves to be boiled as medicine in the purse of Khadija Salum in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Apprentice healer Salama holds a knife used for cutting herbs at Bi Mwanahija Mzee's clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Thwanaidi Juma sits with her daughter Shaimaa Ahmed, one and a half years old, at traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee's clinic in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 2, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Traditional healer Bi Mwanahija Mzee 56, massages pregnant patient Maryam Juma, 29, in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 2, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
A sheikh tries to rouse a woman by pouring water on her neck in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 17, 2019. The woman believes she is possessed by supernatural spirits like djinns. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
Nadra holds her eight-month-old child Muhammad Ali, in their living room in Zanzibar City, Tanzania, February 3, 2019. REUTERS/Nicky Woo
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