Women are empowering themselves and gaining financial independence through our Land For Women project in Rwanda

 
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Ethos

One of the lesser reported stories of survivors in conflict zones is the surge in female-headed households, where women are often caring for many dependents, without land, and with little hope for economic recovery. When we asked Olive, a survivor of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide, how we could help, the answer was simple: “give us the land to grow.”

So in 2019 we launched Land for Women, a unique program to promote the economic empowerment of women through land ownership and sustainable cooperative farming. The project is designed to lift women, their families, and communities out of poverty; to protect the environment and promote sustainable management of natural resources; and to build food security. We provide legal support, land and training, with each cooperative designed to remove up to 100 families from poverty and be completely self-sustaining within five years.

 

Today

Land for Women is now comprised of 5 farming cooperatives with over 150 members - The first 2 farms are about to enter their 5th year of the programme which will see the land finally returned to the women as they are able to move forward having seen average incomes more than triple; participants being able to invest in themselves and their families; stunting and malnutrition has been eliminated; soil quality has improved; and their wider communities have also benefited from cascaded training and access to produce.

We are now actively seeking new opportunities to expand the program outside of Rwanda, and currently in early stage talks with partners in Canada and Democratic Republic of the Congo.

By 2050 - Land for Women will have helped 100,000 women into land ownership and stable incomes.

Here’s what your donation could provide:

£25/$30 could provide farm equipment for one of the women (including watering-can, hoe, spade and secateurs)

£35/$45 provides enough seeds to plant an acre of land, growing vegetables for family meals and surplus crops to sell at the market

£100/$125 could help provide women with training in agricultural skills and business management

£200/$250 means we could provide culturally sensitive therapeutic sessions, including support with gender-based violence, HIV, trauma counselling and poverty

£350/$440 could support an acre of land from seed to harvest, yielding marketable produce worth over three times the value

£1600/$2000 could provide a farm irrigation system enabling year-long access to water

£75,000 establishes an entirely new cooperative, supporting up to 100 families out of poverty

 
 
I am a member of Icyizere Ruhanga Cooperative. Before I joined, I was in the lowest social class. I didn’t really have a future. I couldn’t afford to send my kids to school. I was a prostitute…actually, I thought I was nothing.

Now I am part of this cooperative, I can afford medical insurance, my kids are in school. The Cooperative Icyizere really thought of me. Now when my kids come back from school they find a meal on the table. Cooperative Icyizere led me out of solitude
— an Icyizere Ruhanga Cooperative member

Imboni Gikomero film by Heaven Nikita Iradukunda. Header image by Alice Kayibanda.

 

With thanks to our partners.