-Music, “Usikate Tawi (Amani)” sung by the Chang’ombe Vijana Choir, downloaded from their Soundcloud account cvcmediatz
-Video sequences of the globe and the animated map were created with PictraMap
-ELCA logo and ELCT logo belong to their respective organizations
-image of American and Tanzanian pastors from St. Andrews church, http://standrewsames.org/about-st-andrews/what-do-we-believe/
-Map data from Google Maps, with size comparison created using the third-party Mapfrappe tool
-Great Lakes map image found on the Wikimedia Commons, credited to MellonDor
-”Fishermen on Lake Tanganyika” image found on the Wikimedia Commons, credited to Worldtraveller
-two images of Masai people credited to Jaroslaw D on TripAdvisor
-image of three women farmers found at https://levelground.com/coffee/tanzania/
-image of early architecture from Kilwa Kisiwani or Songo Mnara found at http://solarey.net/ruins-of-kilwa-kisiwani-and-songo-mnara-from-tanzania-africa/
-image of three women on the Swahili coast credited to Sultan Barghash bin Said, accessed at https://omgvoice.com/lifestyle/stunning-photos-swahili-women-1800s/?geoip&country=KE
-Image of early missionaries found on a Preceden timeline of the African Slave Trade, author unknown: https://www.preceden.com/timelines/54992-african-slave-trade-1450-1750
-Tanzanian flag and crest used here with all intended respect for educational purposes
-Tanzanian Crest image taken from the Wikimedia Commons, credited to FischX
-“2100 year old human footprints preserved in volcanic mud near the lake in Managua, Nicaragua” attributed to Dr d12 at the English language Wikipedia
-Mural of slavery and colonialism by Diego Rivera, Photo by Rubén G. Mendoza, 2005, accessed at https://www.researchgate.net/figure/283579741_fig4_Fig-94-Diego-Rivera%27s-murals-highlight-the-brutality-and-corruption-of-the-Spanish
-Ottoman slavers on Zanzibar image found on an African Business Magazine timeline: http://africanbusinessmagazine.com/region/east-africa/timeline-tanzanias-historical-events/
-image of large crowd and man in the corn taken from past President Jakaya Kikwete’s Twitter account
-image of subsistence farmer from @UNFAO twitter account
-Slave Market in Zanzibar sculpture by J K Johnson
-Photo of Christian worshippers credited to Nichole Sobecki/AFP/Getty Images at http://www.ibtimes.com/tanzania-elections-2015-christians-banned-voting-church-2048827
-Gospel Festival Photo from Peter Youngen: http://peteryoungren.org/tanzania-at-the-crossroads/
-Photo of Faustina Nillan at education table attributed to LWF/Dirk-Michael Grötzsch at https://www.lwfassembly.org/en/news/regional-stories/life-stories-tanzania-and-Zimbabwe
-Photo of bus at sunset in Dar es Salaam credited to ITDP in an article by Gregory Scruggs on Cityscope: http://citiscope.org/story/2017/new-bus-rapid-transit-system-earns-dar-es-salaam-2018-sustainable-transit-award
-Other photos of Dar es Salaam bus system credited to Hendri Lombard / World Bank on Flickr
-Other Dar es Salaam photos from D Stanley on Flickr
-Image of Tanzanian family from Kristy at Nerdy Nomad, http://nerdynomad.com/travel-tanzania/an-amazing-intro-to-tanzania-through-couchsurfing/
-Iringa city photos from Emmanual Onyango’s Knowledge Matters blog: http://eonyango.blogspot.com/2009/05/iringa-historic-town-with-many-places.html
-image of the Iringa Lutheran Centre found on a blog: http://iringa-friends-2012.blogspot.com/2012/08/it-was-quiet-weekend-in-iringa-town.html
-Tanzanian road image from an article by Jayne McElwee at http://www.getaway.co.za/travel-ideas/state-of-roads-tanzania/
-Bega Kwa Bega mural, artist unknown, accessed at Korogocho Streetscapes, https://korogochostreetscapes.com/img_8065-1-5/
-All other images in the public domain, accessed through Pixabay and Wikipedia
-Facts and information found at Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Tanzania), Trading Economics (https://tradingeconomics.com/tanzania/rural-population-percent-of-total-population-wb-data.html), City Lab (https://www.citylab.com/design/2015/02/the-bright-future-of-dar-es-salaam-an-unlikely-african-megacity/385801/), ELCA and ELCT websites