100 years of International Women’s day- Flotea’s Story

On Tuesday 8th March 2011 the world will mark 100 years of International Women Day and we are bringing you the personal stories of the women that make Ethnic Supplies tick! yesterday we heard about Sabina an internally displaced refugee from Northern Uganda

Today we are in Tanzania  to introduce you to Flotea Masawe>

Flotea is an amazing woman who left school at a very young age with no qualification to speak of this meant that she was excluded from formal employment and the only skills she had were embroidery skills.  she started out by making table linen and curtains for her own home, when her neighbours saw the quality of her work they asked if she could make home furnishings for them too and soon word had got out and she had a list of customers.

She soon outgrew the space in her two room house, and had to extend it, as well as widening her range to include African tote bags.

Flotea’s idea has grown beyond her imagination and today she employees 30 women from the slums of Dar es Salaam. She shares what skills she has with women less fortunate than she is through workshops on textile production and designFlotea ‘s view about poverty in Africa “I pity any African who believes that some external person/outsider will come and resolve our problems, because I tell you what they will be waiting for a long time”

Women that work with Flotea at her Dar es Salaam work shop

Flotea believes  that the government merely plays lip service to women’s issues and that in fact unless women work together to share skills and resources they are unlikely to succeed. She told me that there are large numbers of women in Tanzania involved in textile production however there is no institution where these women can go and learn about textile and design. They instead rely on skills sharing where those who know teach those that do not. In her mind this is the one thing that would change life for most women especially the slum dwellers.

Other challenges included

  • Lack of IT and communication skills
  • Access to markets the lack of information means  they don’t always know what market demands are

I spent the rest of the afternoon and the best part of the evening with Flotea and her team and I taught them how to use email and PICASA Google’s photographs programme. this would enable them to share photos of their products with folk all over the world. Flotea appreciated this and as I left her she told me this is what we need people to come in and share what they know with us!

Africa Tote Bag

Africa Tote Bag

TO SUPPORT FLOTEA’S EFFORT TO LIFT OTHER WOMEN OUT OF POVERTY PLEASE CONSIDER BUYING ONE OF HER AFRICA TOTES  AT ETHNIC SUPPLIES ONLINE SHOP

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100 years of International Womens Day- Sabina’s story

As we count down to 100 years of International Women’s day, in this series of posts we bring you the personal stories of the women behind our fabulous products. We introduced you to Joy yesterday and today  we take you back to Uganda and bring you Sabina’s story

Sabina

Sabina’s story represents one of the key challenges facing women in Africa today and one of the reasons women face enduring poverty ARMED CONFLICT!

The current President of Uganda came to power in 1985 in a bloody civil war that saw the end of the rule of Milton Obote’s UPC party. Whilst the rest of the country has enjoyed relative peace for most of that time this has not been the case in Northern Uganda in fact if you visited the North and South a few years ago you could be forgiven for thinking that you were in fact in two different countries altogether.

The 20 year war against Kony, he of the Lords Resistance Army (LRA) created several refugees within the country and some of these made their way to other parts of the country.

The Women and their children from northern Uganda settled on a quarry in Kireka a suburb of Kampala and thus the name of the project WOMEN OF KIREKA and   HERE is a conversation I had with Tracey Pell founding member of Project Diaspora about the women

Sabina is one of those women and the  oldest members in Women of Kireka. She has five children, but only two of them are currently living with her. She relies on them to get around as she is confined to a wheelchair. Sabina is already a skilled tailor and would like to open her own tailoring store one day. I met up with Sabina at the back end of 2009  and you can hear that conversation in this video clip

The women produce a range of jewelery made from recycled materials and their most popular range is made with beads made out of recycled magazines: TO SUPPORT SABINA PLEASE BUY HER BRACELET ON ETHNIC SUPPLIES  ONLINE

Sabina's bracelet

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100 years of International Women’s day-Joy’s Story

We are Continuing with our count down to 100 years of International Women’s day- Yesterday we met Jacqueline in SW Uganda and today  we are in Rwanda to meet JOY

On 2 October 2009 I received an email from my buddy @TMSRuge inviting me to an exclusive online conversation with activist Will Shalit

I  had to stay up rather late for this conversation but at the end I felt it was worth it.

During that conversation I learned about Willa’s efforts to help the women of Rwanda and how she had managed to forge links with Macy’s Department store who had started carrying the women’s products.

I also learned that Oprah Winfrey had endorsed a range of bracelets and these were now marketed as the O bracelets. You can see them in the background of this picture. In addition that their baskets and jewellery was also for sale on Oprah’s online shop!

The O beaded Bracelet

YOU CAN ORDER ONE OF THESE BRACELETS AT ETHNIC SUPPLIES

Two months later in a meeting with the Rwanda Commercial Attaché it transpired that the women were keen to replicate that success. In fact a visit to their offices is a must the Commercial Attaché and it has been added to your schedule of folk to see whilst in Kigali Rwanda. Having heard about their work I too was keen to meet them and on 23/12/09 I found myself in front of Joy one of the co-founding sisters

Like many other Rwandese displaced by the conflict between the Hutus and Tutsis Joy grew up in Uganda as a refugee. She had one wish whilst growing up, to help those less fortunate than she was! Today Joy works with over 3000 women who weave knit and saw. She converted her late parents home into a workshop where she personally teaches impoverished women weaving and design skills.

JOY

Joy is very easy to like and we hit it off immediately. Like most of her country’s folk she would like to put the genocide behind her and promote all that is good about Rwanda/Africa. In her own words, there is more to us than the genocide if only people out there would realise it! We would like people to buy our products because they like them or find them useful and not because they feel sorry for us or because of the genocide!

I really could not argue with that and I hope folk out there agree with her too!

Gahaya Links baskets

We speak quickly as she has given the staff the whole afternoon off to go and finish their Christmas shopping and are keen to close so she and the other senior team members can go home and start their Christmas holidays. I am really impressed with this as not many bosses would do this! She is surprised to learn that an online connection had enabled me to learn so much about their work!

She told me about her plans and we had a brief brainstorm before I left and agreed to continue the conversation in the New Year. On My return to the UK I got in touch and we agreed to become partners.

I have a great admiration for women like Joy. My favourite quote is IF YOU THINK YOU ARE TOO SMALL TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE TRY SLEEPING WITH A MOSQUITO; and Joy is one of those women who are convinced that the can make a difference in others lives on however small a scale

I left Rwanda on Christmas Eve and rejoined my family in Uganda. I was in a contemplative mood about the people I had seen and places I had been. I had seen a people full of hope about the future. This country had been to hell and back and was slowly but surely rising from the dust!

Raffia Magazine Rack-from Gahaya Links

The country is fighting back against things like corruption, the law in enforced as it should be and people are treasured! I also learned something interesting, folk in Rwanda that have money send their children to schools in Uganda and also go to Uganda for fun most weekends!!

THIS IS THE FULL RANGE OF HOMEWARE AVAILABLE FROM GAHAYA LINKS

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