• A SPECIAL INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY INITIATIVE •

Women in the Dominican Republic are stepping up, leading their communities out of poverty and into a future shaped by the people who will live it.

Weary of watching families leave to find work and witnessing their community continually restrained by poverty, women are taking action by learning leadership skills and organizing their neighbours to work together, creating local, sustainable solutions to poverty.

 
 
  • family and community. Every night, after a day of managing her family and small business and listening to women, Elsa falls asleep with a vision. “Women in my community worry that smoke from their cooking fires is harming their families.” Elsa got to work. Propelled by the stories of women in her community of Florencio La Yuca, Elsa completed leadership training. Today, she helps women in her community install smoke-free, simple to make stoves in their homes. After seeing her vision of protecting the health of women and their children come to life every day, Elsa falls asleep full of even more ideas for what the future can hold.

 
 
  • leave her community of Florencio to find work, Rosanny is stepping up to help create the community and future she wants. First, she started leadership training so she could strengthen her skills and start creating a better quality of life for her family and everyone in the community.

    Rosanny found her own way out of poverty through beekeeping and is committed to leading other women forward as well. Training women to beekeep and helping them establish hives is showing the community that women are key contributors to a strong local economy.

    Rosanny is refusing to follow the path poverty had set for her. She is pioneering a way forward for herself and women like her.

 
 
  • Danny became the sole breadwinner. Undaunted by the challenge, she led her family out of poverty. “Being a leader in my own life showed me it is possible for others too,” says Danny, now manager of the local community-owned bank. Realizing she could lead women in her community of Florencio La Yuca, Danny honed her natural leadership skill through training. Within a year, she was elected Coordinator of the Community Council.

    Today, Danny is leading her community to a brighter future. “We need electricity and light to move forward, so that’s what we’ll do,” says Danny. When the hydroelectric project finishes, both light and opportunity will shine.

 
 
 

CHANGE THAT PERSISTS ALWAYS STARTS AT HOME

70 home grown locally trained leaders, are inspiring 750 people in the communities of El Rifle, La Yuca Florencio, La China, El Cercado and Mahoma Ariba in the Dominican Republic to end poverty in their communities.