Eight years have passed since Tanzania faced one of the darkest mornings in its history — a tragedy that still feels too heavy for words.
On May 6, 2017, a school bus from Lucky Vincent Primary School in Arusha slipped off a rain-slicked mountain road in the Karatu highlands and plunged into a ravine.
Thirty-two children, two teachers, and the driver lost their lives.
It was supposed to be a day of promise — a trip to sit for mock national exams that marked the students’ growing confidence and hope for the future. Parents had packed lunches, teachers had offered encouragement, and classmates had dreamed of bright results.
But on that wet morning, as the bus wound its way through steep turns, destiny took a turn no one could imagine.
The Day the Country Stopped
Witnesses recall the rain — steady, quiet, deceptive.
The road, carved into the highlands, had become dangerously slick. Investigators later concluded that the bus lost traction, skidded past a guardrail, and fell into the ravine below.
Rescue teams worked through the downpour, but the crash had already stolen nearly every life onboard.