By Isabelle Bryan | Project Leader
Our Self-Help Groups in Ethiopia have continued saving, taking and repaying loans despite the pandemic. These women were empowered to provide for their families and their households’ financial needs including food, clothing, education and access to healthcare.
The generous support of our Hope for Justice donors makes it possible to continue the fight against modern slavery, enabling success stories like that of Aberash*, one of the thousands of women empowered through our Self-Help Groups
37-year-old Aberash* and her husband worked as labourers in Ethiopia to support themselves and their six children, but it was tough for them to provide, with so many mouths to feed.
But then with the support of one of Hope for Justice’s community development workers, Aberash joined one of our Self-Help Groups, which empower women through parenting and child protection, anti-trafficking and exploitation, communication and a range of other skills.
At first, Aberash lacked confidence. But through the group sessions, she learned life-changing lessons about how to form working relationships, identifying needs, saving money, and other skills vital for running a small business.
Aberash benefitted from the Self-Help Group loan system, which helps women become more financially stable. The loans allowed her to begin selling a local soft drink, and then cabbages too. She then bought a cart to help her husband with his work. Another loan, plus the profits from her business, meant she was able to buy some land upon which she is now building a home.
Thanking Hope for Justice for its support over four years, Aberash said: “I was in the dark waiting for people’s support, but Hope for Justice opened my eyes and now not only I am economically strong, but also respected in my community.”
Aberash is now paying back her loans and is looking forward to expanding her business. She also wants to help other women in a similar situation as she once was.
Through education and sensitisation to child protection issues, family strengthening via Hope for Justice’s Self-Help Group model enables greater support for those most at risk of exploitation and trafficking. The model is a long-term, sustainable solution, directed by community members’ own efforts. This approach protects against family breakdown, a major risk factor in child trafficking.
*Name changed to protect constituent identity
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.
Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.
Start a Fundraiser