Albino children maimed by superstition in Tanzania

Deemed to be ghosts, albino children are hunted by shamans, who use their body parts in witchcraft and potions. Their mutilation is thought to bring good luck to the attackers and others who visit witch doctors.

By Michael Matza

The Philadelphia Inquirer
June 27, 2015 at 10:14PM
Luis F. Velasquez, Certified Prosthetics, creates a mould for a prosthetic for Baraka Cosmas Rusambo, 6, of Tanzania at Global Medical Relief Fund and Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadelphia on Wednesday, June 17, 2015. In March, assailants lopped off the right hand of Rusambo. Tanzanians subscribing to superstition see those with albino complexions as demons or ghosts with mystical powers whose body parts are cut off and used in witchcraft and potions. (Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia
Baraka Cosmas Rusambo, 6, of Tanzania, was fitted for a prosthetic hand recently at Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadelphia. He’s one of five children, despised and/or prized for their albinism, receiving free care at the hospital after being attacked and maimed. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

PHILADELPHIA – In Tanzania, superstition dictates that people with albinism are both despised as damaged demons and prized for mystical powers.

Deemed to be ghosts, albino children are hunted by shamans, who use their body parts in witchcraft and potions. Their mutilation is thought to bring good luck to the attackers and others who visit witch doctors.

The stories appall:

In March, assailants lopped off the right hand of a 6-year-old boy, Baraka Cosmas Rusambo.

Last year, 16-year-old Pendo Sengerema had her right arm hacked off at the elbow.

In 2010, Kabula Nkalango was 12 when three men wielding machetes broke into her house, sheared off an arm at the shoulder, and ran away with it. She nearly bled to death.

On a recent Wednesday, the damage wrought by such benighted beliefs met the healing power of modern medicine in Philadelphia. Baraka, Sengerema, and Nkalango were among five persecuted albinos from Tanzania who began free treatment for prostheses at Shriners Hospital in North Philadelphia.

The five were brought to America by Global Medical Relief Fund (GMRF), a small, Staten Island, N.Y.-based charity that has a long-standing relationship with Shriners in Philadelphia, which specializes in pediatric orthopedics.

Operating on an annual budget of $450,000 in donations, GMRF arranges visas, travel and for children who have been maimed in war and natural disasters.

Albinism is a genetically inherited condition that affects about 1 in 20,000 people worldwide. It tends to be more common in sub-Saharan Africa, experts say.

Recently the Canadian group Under the Same Sun released a report that documented 147 killings and 229 nonfatal attacks against albinos within 25 African countries since 1998.

UTSS also maintains a guarded safe house in Dar es Salaam, where the children live and are expected to return when their medical treatment in Philadelphia is complete.

The Tanzanian government has cracked down on albino killings, recently arresting 225 unlicensed "healers," according to the BBC. Last year, the government added the death penalty to the sentences possible for people convicted of attacks on albinos.

Red Cross investigators and other international aid groups say dismembered limbs, genitals, ears, tongues and noses can fetch tens of thousands of dollars on the black market in Tanzania and other parts of East Africa, where anti-albino bias is most prevalent.

GMRF has helped more than 180 children since 1998.

Its founder said she found the children's plight particularly haunting. "This is sadistic," Elissa Montanti said. "You weren't accidentally injured. You didn't accidentally walk into a cross fire. This was intentionally done. Someone came in and just hacked away. This is — how should I say it? — in a world all its own."


Kabula Nkalango, 18, talks with Dan Zlotolow, a specialist in hand and upper-extremity surgery, on June 17, 2015 at Shriners Hospital in Philadelphia, Pa. Nkalango lost her right arm to a machete attack in Tanzania because she suffers from albinism. At left is Elissa Montanti, founder and director of Global Medical Relief Fund. (Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS)
Kabula Nkalango, 18, spoke with Dan Zlotolow, a specialist in hand and upper-extremity surgery at Shriners Hospital in Philadelphia, Pa. Nkalango lost her right arm to a machete attack in Tanzania. At left is Elissa Montanti, founder and director of Global Medical Relief Fund. (Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS) (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Pendo Sengerema, left, 16, watches as Kabula Nkalango, 18, assists Mwigulu Matonange, 12, with opening a bottle of water on June 17, 2015 at the Shriners Hospital for Children in Philadelphia, Pa. All three of the children were mutilated in Tanzania because they suffer from albinism. The Global Medical Relief Fund and Shriners Hospital for Children are examining children for any necessary operations and fitment of prosthetics. (Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS)
Pendo Sengerema, left, 16, watched Kabula Nkalango, 18, assist Mwigulu Matonange, 12, with opening a bottle of water. All three are at Shriner’s in Philadelphia for a dose of hope and healing. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
about the writer

about the writer

Michael Matza