Goat Project in Uganda Improves Lives of Families Affected by HIV/AIDS

Editor’s note: Last Saturday was World AIDS Day. Today we share with you another story of how Heifer’s work goes a long way to benefit families affected by HIV/AIDS. Original story by Christian DeVries.

Women's Goat Project Addresses HIV/AIDS in Mbale, Uganda

Photo by Russell Powell, courtesy of Heifer International.

During the past few years we have witnessed many great breakthroughs in the fight against HIV and AIDS. Awareness campaigns have been launched, dozens of new medicines were approved, and in Thailand in 2009 a clinical trial provided the first clear evidence of a vaccine for humans.

Sub-Saharan Africa has been one of the hardest hit areas. “More than 68 percent (approximately 22.5 million people) of those infected are in sub-Saharan Africa.”

One country that has made a lot of progress through stakeholder cooperation, effective awareness campaigns, and free access to antiretroviral treatment (ARVs) is Uganda. In the late 1980s Uganda’s urban infection rate was around 29 percent, with a countrywide rate of 15 percent. Today the prevalence rate has dropped to 6.5 percent.

“Although the country has been able to dramatically reduce the incidence of HIV/AIDS among the population, the pandemic has caused the death of large numbers of young adults and orphaned approximately 1 million children.” An additional 1.2 million people are living with HIV in Uganda.

Mrs. Lovisa Wamukota (70) lives in Wokukiri village, in Mbale district, in Uganda’s Eastern region. Although she is not HIV positive, her life has been forever changed by this terrible disease.

Lovisa is the sole caregiver for 12 of her grandchildren between 5-18 years old. These children were orphaned by this deadly virus and unfortunately they are all HIV positive. I had the opportunity to meet four of the children: two boys, Simon Wamukota Waswa (15) and his twin brother, Fred Wamukota Kato (15); and two girls, Tereza Wabuyaka (10) and Gladys Wakoli (5). Lovisa’s husband, Mr. Justin Wamukota, passed away at 75-years-old. Together they had nine children; four are still alive and the other five have died.

Life was unimaginably difficult for a widowed elderly woman trying to care for so many young children. She did basic agricultural work for others and sold some of her own crops, but it was never enough. She was never sure where their next meal would come from. “Life was hard. I struggled to find enough food to feed the orphans,” said Lovisa. “I could work very hard, but the production was not enough.”

She desperately wanted to send her grandchildren to school. “It helps a child to learn to look after themselves when they grow up,” said Lovisa. “My parents told me, ‘You need an education so you can read life’s signposts so you won’t get lost.’” However, it was a choice between eating and buying books. “I did not have enough money to send the children to school,” Lovisa said. Whenever she was able to scrap some money together it was spent to meet her family’s basic immediate needs.

The Wamukota family’s life began to change on August 3, 2007, when Lovisa received a Saanen dairy goat from Heifer International. Tereza immediately fell in love with the pure white goat, so Lovisa named the goat “Tereza” also. “She always goes and plays with her goat. She feeds it and cares for it. She will go and get water for her when there is no water,” said Lovisa. “She produces good milk,” said Tereza. “It gives me energy to sweep the house.” “I also drink the milk and get energy,” said Lovisa.

Milk also gives Tereza the energy to play her favorite sport, netball, a fast-paced game similar to basketball. She plays netball at Wochili Primary School where she is in Primary grade 3. Her favorite subject in school is English.

Tereza (the goat) is a fantastic mother. She has kidded six times and each birth has been twins. The gift of one goat to Lovisa has multiplied into 18 goats. Lovisa also received a mineral block and tick medications as part of this project.

The trainings she received provided to be important as she expanded her herd. She has participated in several trainings, including: goat management, disease control, housing, feed, collect and manage manure, fodder, environmental conservation (energy saving stove), milking and handling, and Heifer’s Cornerstones.

Her favorite Cornerstone is Full Participation because, “This Cornerstone encourages people to come together and when we are together I don’t feel lonely,” said Lovisa. “As a family, Full Participation encourages collective action. We do our work together.” She added, “When we are together, we learn from each other and the children learn from me. This will help them sustain their lives.” Lovisa is happy because she knows that her grandchildren will have a skill that they can rely on if school isn’t for them or if they can’t find work after school.

Currently they are milking four does and receive an average of 2 liters per goat. From this 8 liters, 2 liters are used for home consumption and 6 liters are sold. Each liter sells for $0.42, so they earn $2.54 per day or $928 per year.

The manure from so many goats has dramatically improved Lovisa’s crop production. Before the project she was harvesting 200 kg of maize from 1 acre. Now she gets 800 kg or more per acre. Her banana plantation has seen similar improvements. “Ever since I started using the manure I haven’t been able to lift up the bunches because they are too heavy,” said Lovisa.

More food to eat and fresh milk to drink has helped the Wamukota family recover from many of their health problems. “I have noticed a very great change. Without this milk some of the children would be dead now. It is the difference life and death,” said Lovisa. Tereza was the sickest of all the children. Not only is she HIV positive, but her parents died when she was only nine-months-old.

A proper diet with good nutrition helps boost the body’s immune system and in turn increases the effectiveness of HIV medications. Thankfully, all of her grandchildren are now on antiretroviral (ARV) medication. Once a month, Lovisa or one of the older children travels to Mbale to pick up the medicines.

In Lovisa’s opinion, the biggest impact of this project is she now sends all of the children to school. She sells milk to buy school supplies: uniforms, pens, etc., and she sells goats to pay school fees for the children in secondary school. With four children in secondary school, Lovisa pays $153 per year per child,  for a total of $610 per year. For the five children in primary school, she spends an additional $127 per year.

Lovisa is certain that without Heifer’s assistance she would never have been able to spend $737 to send her grandchildren to school. “I am grateful to God that I am alive,” she said. “Many have died, but I am glad I have been alive to see this change.”

Many other families have benefited from this project. Heifer provided 180 families with good dairy goats. An additional 450 families have now received pass on animals. “We thank Heifer Project for working with us and giving us these goats,” said Martha Nekesa (42), another Heifer recipient and Chairwoman of Lovisa’s group.

“Heifer is special, because it gets the donations and delivers it to the families. They have people who check to make sure it arrived to the intended beneficiary,” said Lovisa. “I trust Heifer because they promised me a goat and they fulfilled their promise.”

This simple promise has reduced hunger, improved health, and given 12 children a future that just four years ago seemed impossible. Heifer will continue to fulfill its promises, but we need your help. No donation is too small. Remember that even a small promise has the power to change someone’s life.

Black Friday Deals: Get Them Here, Not There

Looking for Black Friday Deals?

Don’t get in your car to join the masses! Stay here online and get your Black Friday deals with Heifer’s online Gift Catalog.

From the comfort of your home, you can cross everyone off your shopping list with a gift from Heifer. My suggestion for where to start? Goats!

 


Goats Make Awesome Gifts

Need a reason to skip shopping the stores for Black Friday deals? Here are just a few.

Storified by Heifer International · Mon, Nov 19 2012 08:51:06

Need a reason to skip shopping the stores for Black Friday deals? Here are just a few.
NACWOLA Mbale Women’s Goat Project – HIV/AIDS (21-0632-80)Heifer International
Look how happy these goats have made this little boy!
NACWOLA Mbale Women’s Goat Project – HIV/AIDS (21-0632-80)Heifer International
In places where grazing land is limited, goats can thrive on fodder grown and collected by the family. Zero-grazing pens for goats help protect the environment, allow for easier goat manure collection, keep the animals safe from harm and disease, and free up valuable time for farm families.
Consolidation & Institutional Capacity Development Project / Alinafe Dairy Goat Project (21-1601-01)Heifer International
Kids with goat kids are the cutest!
Mary Malambo With a Goat KidHeifer International
img05Heifer International
If you’ve never met a goat, let me go on record saying they are some of the funniest livestock you’ll ever find.
Heifer International
What’s sweeter than feeding a baby goat a bottle? Not much.
DS11-131Heifer International
DS12-008Heifer International
This young man knows the value of the goat kid he’s holding. It’s greater than any gift you’ll find at a department store.
Western Highlands Integrated Livestock Development Project (21-0713-01)Heifer International
Look! Baby goats in a trough!
DS5_Ghana 080Heifer International
This woman loves her goat. I want to squeeze them both.
DS11-332Heifer International
If you gave me a goat from Heifer for the holidays, I’d be almost as happy as this boy.
DS10-0333Heifer International
How can you possibly say no to this cuteness?
Dairy Goats for Unemployment in Paskuqani CommunityHeifer International

Goats are our most popular Gift Catalog item, and it’s easy to see why. They are funny and adorable. More importantly, these small animals can really help a farm family lift themselves out of hunger and poverty.

Black Friday deals

Smiling Goat wants you to shop Heifer for Black Friday deals! Photo courtesy of Heifer International.

Shop Heifer for Black Friday deals now! 

Use our online calculator to see how your Black Friday savings can turn into gifts for good.

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.

Heifer Black Friday Deals

Are you gearing up to go on the hunt for great Black Friday deals? Want to save yourself some trouble and avoid the trampling crowds this year? Ever thought about giving someone a goat? A goat is a great gift for anyone on your shopping list.


Heifer Has the Best Black Friday Deals

Okay, so we’re not running any discounts or BOGOs. That wouldn’t exactly be fair to our project participants. But I challenge you to find a deal on a gift at a big retail store that will delight your loved one AND change a hungry family’s life.

Aside from being my very favorite farm animal (why are they so awesome?), goats are the ultimate deal. Did you know more people in the world drink goats milk than cows milk? It’s no accident. Goats milk is easier to digest because its milk fats are smaller. Goats are also considerably easier to keep because of their compact size. Mama goats can have two to three goat kids per year for several years, which can be sold for profit or kept to quickly increase a family’s herd size.

But don’t just take it from me. Take it from one of our Heifer Haiti project participants:

Black Friday Deals

Photo courtesy of Heifer International.

I am Deinage Pierre Gelerme. I am 54 years old and married with seven children: five sons and two daughters. Some of them go to school and some don’t. We don’t have enough money to send them all to school.

I received four female goats from Heifer. Two of them are pregnant. Not only did Heifer give me the goats, they also trained me on how to take care of them. I am taking good care of them now. With these goats, I hope to improve my life economically and feed my family better than before. I am very appreciative for the distribution of goats in my community. It is a good way to fight hunger and nutrition problems in the area.

So skip the lines and chaos this Friday, and shop Heifer for your Black Friday deals.

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.

Giving Tuesday in One Week

Only one week left to prepare for Giving Tuesday! Are you ready? Need a little inspiration? Check out this special Heifergraphic.

Giving Tuesday Infographic

Heifer International has been a trailblazer in the alternative gift giving market. Our model is simple, yet it has a profound impact on the millions of families we serve each year. This resonates with shoppers and gift recipients alike. We are excited to participate in the inaugural Giving Tuesday, and I hope you will participate.

Get your family and friends in on the Giving Tuesday action, too. Tell them about your plans while you’re gathered together this week.

Participate in Giving Tuesday

Does is surprise you that 79 percent of Americans polled would rather have a donation made in their name rather than a gift they know they’ll never use? Tell us in the comments section.

Use Our Black Friday Savings Calculator to Turn Your Savings into Heifer Gifts  

Livestock Can Help End Hunger and Poverty

Yesterday I wrote about how important measuring impact is to demonstrating Heifer’s success, as well as ensuring our projects are on track. Today, I want to share with you how Heifer’s work with livestock is managed in a way that cares for the animals without jeopardizing the well-being of our project families or their environment.

We’ve all witnessed the growing conversation about animals in agriculture, from their impact on the landscape to their appropriateness in a fast-changing world. Because livestock are at the very core of much of how Heifer works with families, these are issues we have thoroughly researched and have strong feelings for.

Here in the United States, in light of the drought that some of the country is still suffering, there’s the renewal of the livestock and feed vs. food debate. That’s been a topic in Heifer communities for years, so managing food needs for animals, family food needs and care for the environment has been critical for us to get right.

Livestock in Thailand

Photo courtesy of Heifer International

Core to our work are appropriateness and application. In the United States, where we have easy access to fuel, mechanics and spare parts, mechanization makes sense. But that is not the case in most of Africa or Asia, where a water buffalo is a living tractor. Without the draft animal, there would be fewer crops, fewer acres plowed, fewer goods to eat or market.

So, we teach farmers to grow fodder for their animals that doesn’t compete with the human food chain, and to feed animals in place through zero-grazing pens. Impact on land is minimized, and the health of the animals is protected, even enhanced. Livestock can eat foodstuffs not fit for people, so there is rarely competition as we see here.

Livestock in Thailand

Photo courtesy of Heifer International.

There also is the difference that for most of our participant families, animals are part of their culture, their lifeblood. As one of our Thai farmers told us, “If I die, my family will weep for me. If my water buffalo dies, my family will starve.” There is no feed vs. food debate there—they are interdependent and lifesaving.

Animals are an integral part of the value chain for much of the world as well. In Nepal, for example, the demand for goat meat significantly exceeds the country’s current production capacity. It exceeds even the supply when it is supplemented by exports from India and Bangladesh. So the key is to help Nepali farmers produce more and better goat meat, boosting supply and the market chain.

That is behind one of our programs in Nepal, to help 148,000 families—women-led—to improve productivity, and then to help them connect to markets for the milk and goat meat. Much of the work will be done through farmer-owned co-ops that will help participants increase farm production, reach markets, access financial services and create business opportunities.

Livestock in Nepal

Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee, courtesy of Heifer International.

The goal of the work is to empower these families, as well as “pass on” families to become self-sustaining and to build small businesses. The project will help these farmers help their countrymen and women by reducing the importation of goats from foreign sources by 30 percent and importation of milk by 10 percent, building their own economies as well as the country’s economy.

But as I noted Friday, economic improvement by itself is unsustainable, so at the same time we are helping these farmers improve their production, we are providing training in the Cornerstones so that as they are securing their financial future, they are building the community development framework to provide  “collective impact.”

Come back tomorrow to the Heifer Blog to learn how collective impact is integral to the way Heifer works around the world.

Empowering Nepal with Innovative Goat Project

Area Vice President Mahendra Lohani shares plans for Heifer’s signature Smallholder Livestock Value Chain Project in Nepal. Through improved goat production and an innovative spin on Passing on the Gift®, this project will empower 140,000 families to improve their lives.

 

Leading the Poverty Fight in Nepal

Heifer's President and CEO Pierre Ferrari meets with Jag Kuwen Magar (left) and Khir Bahadar Magar in Shaktikhor, Nepal, a few weeks ago.

Heifer International’s President and CEO Pierre Ferrari visited Nepal in late August with Mahendra Lohani, Heifer’s vice president of Asia and South Pacific programs. Reporters Bijay Ghimire and Pushparaj Acharya interviewed Ferrari for the Nepalese Karobar National Economic Daily during that visit. Below is an excerpt from the interview. To visit the online Nepalese news site for the article, click here.

Q:             Heifer Nepal has been working in Nepal for the past 15 years. How would you rate the situation in Nepal?

A:             Lots of significant work has been done in Nepal to alleviate poverty. The transformation that I have witnessed in the community is amazing. Poor farmers’ livelihoods have improved. Agricultural and livestock-keeping techniques have improved. We have taught farmers about value chains. We encourage smallholder farmers to connect to markets and become entrepreneurs. The conditions here are favorable enough for people involved primarily in agriculture to not have to be poor. Changes are not only material, they are also social. There’s material growth and there’s social growth.

Q:             What is social growth?

A:             We work with communities to increase their income, to improve their food security and nutrition and provide trainings to help them adopt environmentally friendly and sustainable agricultural practices. We teach them about the value chain. After one group achieves its goals of improved income and better livelihoods, they teach other groups in the same way, hence fulfilling their social responsibility. The families also receive micro-finance support for bio-gas and toilets, anything they need to help them overcome poverty. Inputs and support that Heifer provides for one group is passed on to the next group. The first group undertakes the responsibility of making this second group equally capable. This ensures continuation of the work even after Heifer completes a project.

Q:             Is it easy to work this way?

A:             The target community, after they benefit from the inputs, form cooperatives. One group has to support the other to ensure income, food security and empowerment. We end a project only after incorporating all these groups into a cooperative. This way, a group of 25 will become a group of 400. Heifer has incorporated almost 71,000 families in this model. This allows them to continue seeking and receiving government and non-government support even after the project has ended. They are able to mobilize their resources better. This way the project never ends, it is continued by the participants themselves. Cooperatives are the best tool to work with resource-poor families.

Q:             How many districts do you work in now?

A:             We work in 38 districts. We have just started a new project focusing on goat farming and dairy. We have realized that if you just make the poor capable enough to earn two meals and day and have a roof over their heads, even the smallest fluctuation will take them back to absolute poverty. We cannot leave them so vulnerable. We have currently been working on creating market reach for farmers. Our main support is targeted toward bringing them above the poverty line.

Q:             In many cases income increases, but poverty still remains. What can we do to improve living standards?

A:             We are focusing on market access and enterprise. We want to assure that this process does not stop after the project. That is why the cooperatives are important. First we bring hope into people’s lives through social and economic support. After this, they will be able to move ahead and access markets with financial incentives. Enterprise will assure regular income, and they will be able to increase their income as the market grows.

Q:             Isn’t it strange for an American NGO to be working through cooperatives and microfinance to improve livelihoods?

A:             We have been doing this for the past 70 years. After the Second World War we distributed cattle to various parts of the world from America and Ireland. This started in 1944. We started in India in 1942 and in Nepal we provided Jersey cows in 1947. We have also provided chicken and chicks. The Tribhuvan highway was just being constructed and was not net open to the public at the time. USAID received special permission from the Royal Palace to use the road to transport the animals. They were delivered to Delhi in a ship and brought from there to Kathmandu in trucks. It was expensive, but we did this work of transporting improved animal breeds all over the world.

Q:             You talked about women’s empowerment. What about the men?

A:             We also train men, but some move to Saudi Arabia and other countries for work. Women live in the village throughout their lives. But our projects are not just for the women. When women are successful, the benefits and income flow throughout the family. Empowering women does not necessarily mean the man’s influence is reduced. Empowering women means empowering the family. This model’s success is proven.

Q:             How did you continue to work even during the [Nepalese rebel] conflict when most international agencies, especially American agencies, were not allowed to work?

A:             Our greatest strength is the families we work with. They represented us and supported us if there were problems in implementation during the conflict. They told the rebels, you are rebelling for better livelihoods for us, so is Heifer, so why do you want to stop the good work? International nongovernmental agencies are often accused of not being transparent. But we were transparent throughout. What amount is allocated to livestock, what amount is allocated to trainings, what amount is allocated to social mobilization, everything is open and clear.

Q:             Why do you think Nepal is poor?

A:             There are limited resources and tools in the country. But I don’t think Nepal is poor. It has a lot of potential to develop in the hydro-power and agricultural sectors.

Q:            What kind of programs will be implemented in Nepal in the future?

A:             Our current project aims to involve smallholders in the goat value chain. It also has a small dairy component. Along with this, we will also focus on strengthening the cooperatives.

Creating and Restoring Haiti Livestock Savings Accounts

At the end of the summer, I traveled to Haiti to spend a couple of weeks visiting projects with Heifer Haiti staff. For previous posts on my trip, see my author page.

Kenflore and Her Favorite Goat

Kenflore poses with her favorite goat. Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International.

Five-year-old Kenflore Theard likes taking care of her family’s goats.

“I take them to the pasture in the morning,” she said, “and (later) I will get them and put them back in the pen. I give them water and grass for food, and after that, I put them in the pasture (again).”

Kenflore’s favorite part of the process is feeding the goats. She also helps milk the mother goat when she needs a little help feeding her kids.

When asked why she likes looking after the goats so much, she responded in typical five-year-old fashion: “I just like it.”

“She is the most important (family member, when it comes to the goats),” said Kenflore’s mother, Jeanne Odne Elfine. “When I’m not at the house, she looks after the goats and protects them from the sun.

“She’s very intelligent.”

Enjoying a Laugh

(From left to right) Jean Patrick Theard (25), Kenflore Theard (5), Jeanne Odne Elfine and Syntilhomme (20) enjoy a laugh. Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International

Jeanne, Kenflore and the rest of the family (six other children) are a part of Heifer Haiti’s From the Ground Up project, the same project that Antonio Louis Fritznel joined. The project, which will reach 12,000 families, began in the wake of 2010′s earthquake as a way to build and rebuild family economies in Haiti and ensure access to basic needs such as food and water for those families.

To accomplish this goal, From the Ground Up is divided into 11 subprojects. Each subproject is like its own project: each works with different local organizations in distinct geographic areas of the country. And each subproject shares livestock resources that best fit the needs of the community of participants, whether it be rabbits, goats, cows, tilapia or something else.

Just as Antonio is a project participant and recipient of rabbits through COSDERSLS in St. Louis du Sud, Jeanne, Kenflore and family joined From the Ground Up and received goats through local organization CODEDPE (Collective for Sustainable Development and Environmental Protection) in Maniche.

Owning goats, or any type of livestock, is a big deal for families like Jeanne’s. Of course, the family can use the goats’ meat to improve their nutrition. But as of yet, they haven’t eaten any of the goats. In fact, most of the livestock owners I talked to in Haiti had not used their animals for meat.

In Haiti, livestock is used as a kind of savings account. The animals are kept healthy and happy, and when the family needs a little extra money, they can sell some of the animals.

“If (one of us) has to go to the doctor, we can sell (a goat),” Jeanne said. “Or we can sell a goat to pay for school (fees for the children).”

In fact, the family is hoping to send Kenflore to school for the first time in January. In July, the family fulfilled their Passing on the Gift requirement and gave some of their largest goats to another family involved with the project, so the goats they have now aren’t big enough to sell. Eventually, the family believes those goats will help keep Kenflore in school.

Goat in Maniche, Haiti

One solution to keep kids in school in Haiti: a goat! Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International

One of the many devastating results of the earthquake and hurricane of 2010 was that, in effect, the disasters wiped out thousands of savings accounts (i.e. their livestock). Through Heifer International Haiti and groups like CODEDPE, Haitians families are restoring or creating for the first time livestock savings accounts will help them in times of need. To learn more and to support Haitian families, please visit the web page for Heifer Haiti’s newest project, REACH. To support communities around the world that are in the process of post-disaster, long-term rebuilding, please visit Heifer’s disaster rehabilitation fund.

Skipping in the Field

Kenflore, skipping through the forage field as her brothers tend to the garden. Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International.

Heifer CEO Travels: An Update from Nepal

It has been more than a year since my last visit to Nepal and it feels good to be back! I’m anxious to see the changes that have occurred since I have been gone.

My first visit was to Kathmandu and to meet with Heifer Nepal staff. They are truly a talented team with a total commitment to building social capital as THE way to successful rural agricultural development. They understand the impact of the 12 Cornerstones and include these values into project work.

Nepal has implemented the Nepal Signature Project that will embody our work of increasing our impact. This project hopes to serve 140,000 farmers in goat and dairy value chain enterprises to increase families’ nutrition and income. The Nepal staff is very confident and very excited at the impact they will have on so many lives. I really am in awe of the amazing work that the Nepal staff has accomplished regarding this project since January.

Heifer International CEO Pierre Ferrari's first trip into the field to Asia (Nepal country programs).

After my initial meeting with Heifer Nepal, I spent the rest of the afternoon meeting with government officials and project collaborators who have pledged to support our work.

My second day was spent in various meetings with representatives from World Bank, International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).  There were interesting discussions. As Dr. Gayatri Acharya, acting Country Director for the World Bank in Nepal, said, “Money is not the problem, there is plenty of money. It is [lack of] responsible execution that is the problem.” In Heifer’s case, I know that Nepal Country Director, Dr. Shubh Mahato, and his staff have built incredible relationships with various organizations that will enhance our current work and demonstrate our commitment and comparative advantage in the building of social capital.

Nepal is very poor with continuing poverty, malnutrition, unemployment and corruption. It is apparent that Heifer NEEDS to be here, and in working with our partners to increase our impact, Heifer will be a key player in eradicating poverty.

Heifer International CEO Pierre Ferrari's first trip into the field to Asia (Nepal country programs).

Puja Singh, Communications and Network Officer for Nepal, shared some of my visit to the Kabilash village in her post “First Steps into Sustainability.” This village is home to a little more than 1,000 families who will be a part of the Nepal Signature Project. As Puja mentioned, this was my first time meeting with a Self Help Group (SHG) prior to receiving training. It is evident that life is not easy and the women were very shy and nervous. The Nepal staff explained how radical the change is after participating in Cornerstone training, and these women will be more assertive and confident. We met with a second group, who are in a similar situation as the first group. Their agroecological and livestock practices are inadequate; their animals are sick, ill fed and scrawny and do not fetch good prices and have high mortality rates.  They mentioned to us they were hungry and struggled to find the next meal for themselves and their children. It was a very sobering experience. I would like to think that we shared hope with these families, knowing that Heifer would soon be working with them to support their efforts to attain self-reliance.  We also met with some SHGs that have been Heifer project participants for more than two years. The contrast was amazing. Their success has been motivating for the new groups preparing to engage in Heifer projects.

The following day we visited the Devitar village. This was the village I visited 18 months earlier, in my first trip to Nepal. The participants are thriving and their income is up substantially. It really was quite moving to see the continued progress.

Heifer CEO Pierre Ferrari visits Nepal projects.

As my time in Nepal came to a close, I visited additional Heifer projects in the Chepang area. Although they were all at different stages in their projects, you could see their progress. The Cornerstones training has really served them well as a foundational basis for their work. One of the groups even received a visit from the Prime Minister of Nepal! These SHGs understand that scale matters and they are now they most visible and impactful advocates for their communities. I’m pleased to see that many of the SHGs are led by some forceful and confident women. I truly wish that you could experience the power and excitement from these projects.

My journey continues onto Thailand and Cambodia. The days have been very long, but as I have mentioned before, I am energized by the people I meet!

Namaste.