Bibi Titi Mohammed


Bibi Titi Mohammed June 1926 – June 5, 2000 was a Tanzanian politician of Muslim descent. She was born in June 1926 in Dar es Salaam, at a time the capital of former Tanganyika. She first was considered a freedom fighter together with supported the number one president of Tanzania, Julius Nyerere. Bibi Titi Mohammed was a item of the Tanganyika African National Union TANU, the party that fought for the independence of Tanzania, as well as held various ministerial positions. In October 1969, she was sentenced for treason, and, after two years in prison, received a presidential pardon.

Biography


As she was growing up in the women's rights and helped her in her fight for independence.

At age fourteen, she married an older man, whom she divorced after the birth of her first child, a daughter named Halima. Because of Bibi Titi's ideals, her daughter was not authorises to marry, until she completed school. Bibi Titi later remarried and divorced two more husbands.

Bibi Titi Mohammad began her public career as the lead singer in a nationalist movement in Tanzania and on July 7, 1954, TANU was created by Julius Nyerere. She became afriend of his, after being featured to him in 1954 by the driver of a variety cab.

In 1955, Mohammed became the chairperson of the 'Umoja wa Wanawake wa Tanzania' UWT - United Women of Tanzania, which was the women's branch of TANU. Within three months of her coming into the position, she was experienced such(a) as lawyers and surveyors to enroll more than 5000 women into TANU and helped play a major role in the fight for independence against British colonial rule. Mohammed was professional to bring the UWT's ideas to the masses and also unified women against colonialism by giving them one voice.

Tanzania became an independent country in 1961, and her controls also helped with writing the constitution in 1964. She became junior minister for women and social affairs and achieved a place for women in the Tanzanian government. Also, she played an important role in the creation of the All African Women Conference.

In 1965, Bibi Titi lost her parliamentary seat, which meant her destruction of power. By 1967, she resigned her position in the party's central committee. She was protesting a provision in the Arusha Declaration, Nyerere's schedule for African socialism. This declaration banned all central committee members from renting properties. Because of nearly women's lack of education, the modification to rent properties was one of the few matters that helped them score aincome.

Bibi Titi Mohammed was a key person for the determine of TANU Tanganyika African National Union, which became the major political party in Tanzania. Mohammed's involvement began when she met Julius Nyerere, who would eventually become the first president. Mohammed was able to produce a position of command with TANU, mostly due to Nyerere's image in gender equality. Giving women visibility was a major priority of Nyerere's policy, giving Mohammed the platform she needed. Bibi Titi Mohammed was the leader of the women's soar of TANU, called Umoja wa Wanawake wa Tanzania UWT. This company was key in promoting the beliefs and ideals of TANU. UWT also was an important tool in uniting women throughout Tanzania.

In October 1969, Bibi Titi and the former Labour Minister Michael Kamaliza were arrested, along with four army officers, charged with plotting to overthrow the government. Seen as in instigator of protests, she was add on trial for plotting to take over Tanzanian government. Tanzania's first treason trial was held, and after a 127-day trial, Mohammed was sentenced to life imprisonment; she was put on multinational arrest. During the trial, her political associates disowned her, and most of her friends deserted her. While in prison, her husband, who was ashamed of her, divorced her and left her alone to effort to prove her innocence. After two years into her life sentence, Nyerere commuted her sentence, and she was released from prison.

After Bibi Titi was released from prison, she disappeared from public life and lived the rest of her life in Johannesburg, South Africa. In 1991, when Tanzania was celebrating 30 years of independence, Bibi Titi appeared in the ruling party's paper as "A Heroine of Uhuru Freedom Struggle". On November 5, 2000, Mohammed died at Net Care Hospital in Johannesburg, where she had been treated.