International Women’s Day: Be Part of the Solution

Editor’s note: Empowering women is at the core of Heifer International’s model for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on March 8, this week we are sharing stories of the women with whom Heifer works, who take the gifts of livestock and education to produce extraordinary results for themselves, their families and their communities.

International Women's Day - empowering women

Dang Hong Thuy, 47, and her daughter Nguyen Thi Yen Nhi, 17, hold a gosling near their home in Vietnam. Photo courtesy of Heifer International.

Gender equity is central to Heifer’s success in eliminating hunger and poverty while caring for the earth. A family can more easily lift itself out of poverty when men and women learn to share and respect their roles and responsibilities. That’s why Heifer directly confronts gender equity in its 12 Cornerstones for Just and Sustainable Development.

While women own less than one percent of the land in developing countries, they are responsible for producing 80 percent of the food. Heifer empowers women worldwide by investing in their families’ health, education, and nutrition.

International Women's Day - education of girls

Lidia Ingabire, age 8, of Rwanda, shows her mother Arodia Uwimbabazi, 32, what she’s done at school. Photo courtesy of Heifer International

Women are also more likely to pass on the gift of their education and success to their families. Heifer encourages girls to study math and science, and also supports female entrepreneurs. Training and workshops such as animal health, holistic community development, and fiber spinning ensure participants learn skills to build a solid foundation and become self-sufficient. Through Heifer’s work, women also collaborate to establish better communities and afford decent education for their children.

Heifer believes every woman has something to contribute to their families and communities, especially if they have been excluded or undervalued within the culture. The opinions and full participation from women leaders is a vehicle of change, which also fosters helpful interaction between neighbors.

Success stories like the Promotion and Protection of Women’s Rights and Socio-Economic Empowerment project in Cambodia, will continue to promote gender equality and women’s empowerment.

Around the world, Heifer is working to end hunger and poverty and care for the earth. A charitable gift to Heifer not only provides livestock and training, it gives hope and dignity to women as they improve their lives.

Be part of the solution with Heifer on International Women’s Day

Empowering Women to… Empower Women

Editor’s note: Empowering women is at the core of Heifer International’s model for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on March 8, this week we are sharing stories of the women with whom Heifer works, who take the gifts of livestock and education to produce extraordinary results for themselves, their families and their communities.

Women are on the rise in Rwanda. The country’s constitution requires that 30% of its parliament be women, and Odette Uwamariya, governor of the Eastern Province of Rwanda says women now make up more than half the parliament. “Fifty-six point two percent,” Charles Kayumba, Heifer’s Rwanda country director, clarifies. Even better.

Rwanda

Photo courtesy of Heifer International.

This beautiful country, once so torn by civil war and later genocide, now knows almost no crime. Economic growth is at about 7%. Is it all due to women? Clearly, there are many factors at work here. But it’s significant that the genocide left the country 70% female. Women virtually had no choice but to step up to the work of re-building a nation.

Even with the development so evident in the capital city of Kigali, hunger and malnutrition are still the biggest problems in the provinces. Heifer has helped more than 40,000 families feed themselves and earn a living, most of them female-headed. The government of Rwanda has taken notice and started a program modeled on Heifer’s. The families who receive cows from the government are required to pass on the gift of the cow’s offspring to someone else in the community. Sound familiar? In many areas of the country, the government has turned to the experts– asking Heifer to oversee the program.

 

Uwamariya speaks about empowering women
Odette Uwamariya. Photo courtesy of Heifer International

“I want to acknowledge and recognize Heifer International for the good work they are doing here, and Dr. Kayumba for managing this program,” said Madame Uwamariya at our recent meeting in Rwamagana, the seat of the Eastern Province. Particularly among those affected by HIV, “we have seen tremendous changes after working with Heifer in terms of nutrition and income levels in the community,” Uwumariya reported.

A case in point is Nyirafaranga Liberathe, who lives in Rwinkavu Sector, Kayonza District. She is HIV positive, lost her husband during the genocide and now cares for three children and two grandchildren. When she first began taking medication for HIV in 2005, her antibody count (the bodies that fight infection) was around 96. Medication brought the number up to about 300. Since she began working with a Heifer goat project in 2010, she has been drinking goat’s milk regularly and eating more and better vegetables from her garden. Her antibody count now is at 926.

empowering women in Rwanda

Nyirafaranga Liberathe with grandchildren. Photo courtesy of Heifer International.

The transformation Liberathe has undergone is not just physical, though. Before she began working with Heifer, she felt separated from her community, guilty even. She kept her condition to herself. She lived in fear of poverty, of having nothing. Now, she says, “I feel stronger and am accepted by the community. I have food, I’m fine.” She realizes she now has hope, and a future. “I have helped another family [through POG], I am free from debt, I feel excitement and am happy to be able to assist someone else in need.”

Just as Liberathe has undergone a transformation, so has Rwanda, helped along by strong women… and Heifer International. You can see it in the landscape, in the city, in the countryside, and especially in the eyes of the Heifer project participants. Empowering women through development may not solve all the world’s problems, but after visiting Rwanda, it’s interesting to wonder just what might happen if more women in more places were given more tools and training. Imagine the transformation…

Make a difference by starting a women’s group today.

Empowering Women Helps End Gender-Based Violence

Many Impoverished Women Need Empowering

Ganga Khanal lives in a village in Nepal’s southern flatlands. She is stubborn, driven and outspoken, but she gave birth to daughters instead of a son. Since sons are very important in her culture, she believed she was letting her family down, and so did her husband. Their relationship was strained to say the least. He wouldn’t listen to anything she had to say, and after the birth of their second daughter, he married her sister so he could have a son. Khanal was not happy and often fought with her sister, but when she spoke up, her husband hit her.

Heifer International’s Projects are Empowering

Empowering Ganga Khanal and her chickens

Since she began working with the Shantikunja Social Entrepreneurs Women’s Cooperative, Ganga Khanal has been able to expand her chicken coop.

She had no hope, until she learned that a group participating in a Heifer project was looking for another group to pass-on the empowering gifts of animals and trainings. Despite bitter opposition from her husband, she formed a self-help group (SHG) and received goats and trainings.

“Today I am something. I have substance; I have animals; I have crops,” Khanal said.

That is just the beginning. She sits on the executive board of a woman’s cooperative, and helps run the co-op store that sells produce grown by its members. She is empowered, and has the respect of her husband and her children, including two sons (born after her husband married her sister).

Her son, Sudip, said, “I used to laugh at them sitting in their groups and thought they would never do anything good.” But he says that has all changed now. “I have so much respect for these women who have created opportunities for people like me. The future looks bright for us because of our moms.”

Empowering Women Can Help them Out of Violent Situations

On this, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, you can make a difference. Give the gift that’s key to empowering women like Khanal. Starting a Self-Help Group provides women with training and livestock and gives them the support and self-confidence to lift themselves and their families out of poverty, and oftentimes, out of a hostile home environment that has been plagued with domestic violence.

Shantikunja Social Entrepreneurs Women’s Cooperative

Group photo of the Shantikunja Social Entrepreneurs Women’s Cooperative Limited in front of their store.

What makes Heifer unique is that when you help someone like Khanal, she is empowered to help someone else, in her own SHG or in a new one through Passing on the Gift®, and the cycle continues until the entire village, and beyond, has been transformed.

Read the more about Khanal’s journey and the journeys of several other Nepalese women and their changing lives in this story, The Heart of Enterprise, featured in World Ark magazine.

Give the gift that’s key to empowering women.

This post is part of our What to Give series, where we’re helping you choose the best Heifer gift for your loved ones. Read previous What to Give posts here, and subscribe to the What to Give series here.

Still don’t know what to give? Check out our entire online Gift Catalog.