About Tribes & Nations

Tribes and Nations is a fair trade family business run by us, Grant and Mignonne Murray.

We, with our two boys, lived in Tanzania for 4.5 years. We went there with CMS doing youth work in the Anglican Church. Our time there brought us face to face with the issues of poverty in education, health issues, women???s rights and income generation. Since returning in 2003 we have desired to make a connection with the poor through trade, thus Tribes and Nations was born.

our philosophy

Tribes and Nations aims to provide a market bridge between poor communities and the West. We focus on fair trade, meaning that, the one who does the work receives a fair wage or profit. We desire to work mostly with projects set up as income generating schemes for people in poverty. We are especially concerned for those who have felt poverty more acutely because of social stigma (eg. AIDS sufferers) or bias against minority religious groups.

On this side of the ocean we want to encourage Australians to think and act carefully with every purchase they make so that the values of fairness that we hold dear are not contradicted with our purchases.

what does tribes and nations offer you?

Quality fair trade handmade products

Resources to educate yourself and others

DIY systems to help you easily share information and sell fair trade goods

Conscience clear shopping

Fashionable and classic, western styles mixed with the exotic/ethnic.

Personal (jewellery, decor) to functional (bedding, clothing) wares

Individual care for all buyers (not a call centre).

The History of Tribes and Nations

Grant (born in Sydney) and Mignonne, (born in Sri Lanka), moved to Tanzania, East Africa in 1997.

"Our time in Tanzania was the most rewarding, yet steepest learning curve of our lives. We lived in Musoma, on the edge of Lake Victoria, for five years. Our two sons were 8 and 9 when we returned to Australia," said Mignonne.

Grant said, "Our experiences were rich, mixed with great joy but also deep sadness. We worked for the Anglican Church in youth and women's work, mainly at village level among the poor. We saw the harshness and injustice of poverty."

As we view these 'unseen people' via the media, remember they too watch television in small tea shops and see how the global community lives. The gap is real and wide. When hope, vision and desire are quashed, it may appear as apathy and laziness views of the poor that truly destroy their dignity.

catching the vision

Mignonne saw possibilities for change in the Tanzanian village she visited twice weekly: I got the mothers group a sewing machine, material and thread. They taught themselves to sew by unpicking and examining a garment! Thus began a micro industry their enthusiasm was fantastic and vision boundless.

"When we gave one man flower and vegetable seeds, he gathered old milk containers, planted and grew them. Soon he had a small nursery, and was known as the village expert! He had never seen results from his own initiative before this!" explained Grant.

this micro industry has caught our imagination!

After much hard thought and prayer, Tribes and Nations was born. Based on fair trade principles, we seek to be a market bridge between income generating projects and the global community.

We are delighted to see co-operation between the producers we source from and the west in terms of design, style and colours. We have been humbled by the quality of their products.

We desire the global community to know the poor don't always want a handout. The vast majority want to stand equally with us, shoulder to shoulder, earning and income that allows them to move forward.

 

 

 

About T & N

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