Our
Mission

We believe Africans were never meant to grieve alone.
At Urangani, we exist to make sure that every woman or family facing miscarriage or infertility receives what they deserve:

compassionate care, a strong and present community, clear and empowering information, and the dignity to grieve and heal—regardless of income, location, or circumstance.

Loss is already hard enough. Access to support shouldn’t be.

Our
Story

On 10 February 2025, a routine 15‑minute dating scan changed our lives.

The pregnancy we had welcomed with such joy in our fourth year of marriage had stopped progressing. At twelve weeks—during the appointment just before we hoped to share our news—our baby was found to be measuring only eight weeks. They called it a missed miscarriage. Time stood still.

Our Pillars

Through speaking engagements, workshops, open letters, and strategic partnerships, we engage with government, healthcare providers, employers, and media to change how loss is treated across systems. We are available for panels, moderated workplace conversations, leadership training, awareness campaigns, and work benefits consultation because the systems around us need to learn how to hold loss better.

We are whatever you might need during this time.
A listening ear. A clear explanation. A place to cry. A friend to accompany you. A reminder that you are not alone. We connect families to compassionate care, trustworthy information, and trauma-informed professionals—especially where access is limited.

We provide trauma-informed, culturally relevant guidance on miscarriage and infertility to help families understand their options and feel less alone. We also break down medical language, share practical tips, and equip women and their families with knowledge about their rights, choices, and next steps — so they feel informed, supported, and empowered every step of the way.

At Urangani, we are reclaiming space for stories that were never meant to be hidden. Through storytelling, art, memory-making, and media, we are working to shift how African communities understand, speak about, and honour reproductive loss and hardship.

"Together, we hold space. Together, we heal"

Whether you've walked this road yourself or simply believe no one should face it alone: there's a place for you at Urangani.