Dada Salama (“Safe Sister”) is an ongoing survivor-centered initiative implemented by the Hijabi Mentorship Program to strengthen gender-based violence (GBV) prevention, survivor support systems, and economic justice pathways for women and adolescent girls in Kwale County.
The initiative is being implemented in:
Designed in response to rising levels of GBV, economic vulnerability, teenage pregnancy, and exploitation affecting Adolescent Girls and Young Women (AGYWs), Dada Salama combines survivor-centered case management, psychosocial support, economic empowerment, advocacy, and community prevention strategies to strengthen protection and recovery pathways for women and girls.
The project specifically focuses on strengthening community-led systems that support survivors beyond emergency response by linking them to long-term healing, justice, financial inclusion, and reintegration opportunities.
Dada Salama is strengthening community-based GBV prevention and survivor support systems in Kwale County by combining protection, healing, advocacy, and economic empowerment within one integrated model.
The initiative recognizes that sustainable recovery for survivors requires more than emergency response — it requires long-term pathways to dignity, safety, economic resilience, and community reintegration.
The Hijabi Mentorship Program (THMP) is a community-rooted, women-led organisation advancing justice, dignity, and choice for girls and women in coastal Kenya and beyond.
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