Editors Note: A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer Internationals core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Womens Day on Thursday, March 8, this week were sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.
Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee
Thirty-year-old Clarice Tine has biceps Madonna would die for, plus shes got her hands on the money.
Tine is the treasurer for the Fandene community group near Thies in Senegal. Her group is working with Heifer to bring brawnier breeds of sheep and pigs to their village, where need grows each year as the weather turns drier and less hospitable to traditional crops.
Womens lib is slow to catch on in rural Senegal, but Fandene embraced Tine as the obvious choice to be the money man.
What they are looking for is someone who is fair and honest. If you give the responsibility to a woman, you will have that, our translator Mbouille Diallo explained.
The vice chairman of the group in Fandene is also a woman, although the leadership in most neighboring villages is solely male. A junior high graduate and trained seamstress who earns extra money doing intricate embroidery work, Tine had the education credentials and work ethic to take on a leadership role. And she lived for a few years on her own in the raucous capital city of Dakar, proving she had savvy.
Tines awesome arms come from toting around her sons, ages 5 and 2, and fetching water at the well each day. Both of these jobs are considered womens work in Senegal.
But heres the thing. Schlepping toddlers and hauling dozens of buckets of water up from a well 40 feet deep apparently result in gorgeous arms and shoulders unmatched by any of the men we spied nearby. Madge, take note.