Choose a site:
Soul Beat Africa is co-sponsored by Soul City Institute and the Communication Initiative

SOUL BEAT AFRICA

Where communication and media are central to AFRICA's social and economic development

AFRICA|Approaches|Tools|Issues|Regions/Countries|MDGs|Polls / Discussions

E-magazines

Upcoming Events


Average Rating: no ratings submitted

Pilika Pilika (Busy Busy)

Country

Tanzania

Region

Africa

Programme Summary

Launched in 2004, Pilika Pilika, a radio soap broadcast in Kiswahili in Tanzania, is produced by Mediae and sponsored by a range of donors - at the time of writing they were WaterAid, Femina Hip, and Policy Forum. The drama aims to spread awareness about issues relating to sustainable rural livelihoods such as home hygiene and community water management, gender issues, and local rights and responsibilities at the village level. Pilika Pilika, which means "busy, busy" in English, is set in the fictional Tanzanian village of Jitazame, a kind of crossroads village that has representatives of most local cultures.

Communication Strategies

Pilika Pilika goes out weekly on Tanzanian radio networks, transmitted during prime-time on the national broadcaster and repeated on local FM stations. It is written, produced, and performed by local people in a studio on the outskirts of Arusha. The edutainment drama is followed by a discussion programme that explores in detail some of the issues raised in the show through the views of rural children, farmers, and a panel of experts.

Mediae is currently sponsored by WaterAid, Femina Hip, and Policy Forum but has also worked closely with the Department for International Development(DFID), the Natural Resource Institute(NRI), Farm Africa, and others to include themes and messages relating to issues such as agriculture, education, health, hygiene and rights and some governance issues. One of the episodes dealing with water, hygiene, and sanitation told the story of how Mawazo, a key character, falls into his poorly maintained pit latrine and then has to walk for hours to the river to clean up because the water pump in the village was broken.

According to the organisers, partnerships with organisations such as WaterAid, Femina Hip, and Policy Forum are an important part of the communication strategy. For example, WaterAid is closely consulted on scripts for the shows and is a regular provider of experts for the discussion programme which visits communities all over the country in order to gauge the views of a cross-section of the population.

Before the launch of the drama, Mediae conducted two studies into radio listenership patterns and information needs of rural audiences in the region and identified key information needs for these audiences.

The team from Pilika Pilika were trained by Mediae who work in East Africa and specialise in the production of radio and television educational drama.

Development Issues

Natural Resource Management, Sanitation, Rights, Gender

Key Points

According to the organisers, the average listening figures show that Pilika Pilika reaches around three million people with each broadcast enabling WaterAid to get messages about safe hygiene practices, good management of water supplies and sanitation to a broader audience than is reached with their direct project work or by their partners in Tanzania. They also say that the show is now in its third year of production and regularly receives a large number of letters and text messages from people whose lives have been changed by messages on the show.

Partners

Mediae, WaterAid, Femina Hip, Policy Forum

Contact

David Campbell
Director
Mediae

259 Miotoni Road, Off Ngong Road
Karen

Nairobi
Kenya
Tel: +254 722 720 235

Kate Lloyd Morgan
Director
Mediae - United Kingdom

Turley Farm, Delly End
Hailey, Oxon

OX29 9XA
Great Britain & Northern Ireland (UK)
Tel: + 44 (0) 1993 868470

Source


Placed on the Soul Beat Africa site April 09 2008
Last Updated April 15 2008

How useful did you find this page to your work?

1 - not useful    5 - very useful
Feel free to leave us comments
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Register and Participate

Subscribe to Soul Beat e-mag, Get poll results, Contribute to Forums, etc...
New to CI? » Start here

User login

Help Seed The CI Network

Poll