By Rima Parker Kempeneer | Project Leader
On a recent visit to Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria, Development Africa (DA) staff delivered a truckload of donated food supplies, second-hand clothes and shoes for women and children, schooling supplies and household items to be distributed to participants of the support groups and workshops for mothers with HIV/AIDS. Each support group has around 80–110 women who attend with up to 200 children participating in a separate children’s support group. At each support group, the women involved in the Small Business Scheme have a thirty-minute workshop, training them in basic business management skills. In collaboration with 'Centre for Child Health and Education', a local NGO, Development Africa provides widows with HIV/AIDS with small shops that sell a variety of products or services (food provisions, hair-dressing, catering, etc.). DA provides the initial cost of setting up the business (rent, initial stock, etc.) and supports them with regular educational training programs and workshops on the development and management of their business. In addition to the donation of goods, the team visited five shops that had been sponsored in December 2015 to assess progress. The shops have already made a substantial impact on the women’s lives through generating a sustainable income. The shop owners will continue to attend the workshops and be monitored throughout the year to make sure the shops are operating effectively.
Mrs. Ogeroju's Story:
Mrs. Ogeroju is a 44-year-old HIV-positive widow who is a part of the DA Small Business Scheme in Ibadan, Oyo State. She has attended two shop-keeping workshops so far in 2016 as in December 2015 she was given sponsorship to rent her shop, buy a sewing machine and other tailoring items. This shop has provided her with the means to keep her 3 older kids in boarding school after her husband passed away from AIDs and the income enables her to afford decent housing for herself and her two younger children. She is the sole provider for her 5 children, and her goal is to stay healthy and work hard to provide a good education for her children, and help put them through college. Mrs. Ogeroju already had basic training in tailoring, so in addition to the start-up costs for the shop, DA sponsored a refresher course to update her skills and train her in current fashion and preferred styles. Since she is on a main road in a densely populated area of Ibadan, she has also started selling car and motorbike spare parts and oil in addition to tailoring. This new endeavor is successful so far and she hopes to expand her products in a few months after she has saved enough capital for further stock.
*Face blurred due to privacy regulations
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