Women of the Lupane District in Zimbabwe create livelihoods and independence one stitch at a time
Grace Ngwenya, 77, has an eye for detail and an effortless style as she weaves ilala palm fronds into beautiful baskets.
Her actions are swift and methodical as she twirls, straightens and tugs the long strands into a fine stitch. Every now and then, she pauses to dip the last three fingers of her right hand into a shallow tin of water that sits beside her — to wet the fibers and make them pliable.
Slowly, under the deft motion of her hands, a basket takes shape. She insists on attention to “detail, neatness and creativity.” Once she has decided on the shape and color of her product, she will work for seven days straight to complete the task.
When she’s done, the basket will be inspected for quality, carefully packed up and shipped off to its buyer who could be anywhere in the world from Germany to the United States. Her efforts earn her about $50 per month — a small fortune in a place where women once counted it a blessing to earn even a few dollars over the course of several weeks.
Ngwenya lives in Shabula Village in Ward 15 of Zimbabwe’s arid Lupane District, located in the Matabeleland North Province that occupies the western-most region of the country, 170 km (105 miles) from the nearest city of Bulawayo.
Home to about 90,000 people, this area is prone to droughts and has a harsh history of hunger.
Today, rural women are putting Lupane District on the map with an innovative basket-weaving enterprise that is providing them with a decent wage, and preserving an indigenous skill. It is enabling them to erect a barrier against extreme weather events. They are investing the profits of their creativity into sustainable farming.
Perfecting skills, preserving arts
It started small, when a group of women came together in 1997 to produce baskets and other crafts from local forest products and sell them along the Bulawayo-Victoria Falls road, a major tourist route.
In 2004, with the help of a Peace Corp volunteer, they established the Lupane Women’s Centre in order to streamline their production. At the time they had just 14 registered members.
A decade later, they have grown their ranks to 3,638 members hailing from 28 wards in the district. Average earnings have increased from $1 to $50 per month, and this past May, one of their members earned $700 from the sale of her crafts.
For a community that was barely able to put three square meals on the table each day, this is a huge step toward a more wholesome life.
“Weaving has transformed my life, even in my old age,” Ngwenya said, pointing to a half-built residence not far from where she sits, busily threading away. In this impoverished village, the emerging two-roomed brick house is a veritable super-structure.
“This year sales have been slow,” she said, “but God willing, my house should be complete by next year. I have already bought the windows, and I will plaster and paint it myself.”
In addition to a dwelling place, Ngwenya’s income helped her to buy a goat and erect a fence around her ‘keyhole’ garden — a popular farming method all across the African continent involving a keyhole-shaped vegetable bed, with an active compost pile that feeds crops in the walled-in plot at its center.
At a weaving competition last year, she even won an ox-drawn plough and recently sunk more of her savings into the purchase of a heifer and some simple farm tools.
Considering that Ngwenya joined the collective during a drought year in 2008, she is forever grateful for her newfound wellbeing. And her life isn’t the only one that has changed.
Barely a stone’s throw away is the homestead of her sister Gladys, and her husband, Misheck Ngwenya. This cluster of huts is distinguished by solar lights attached to thatched roofs, a luxury secured with the boons of Gladys’ basket sales.
“In the past I would go to my neighbors to ask for sugar,” Gladys recalls. “Not anymore.”
She said the women’s centre has helped her to perfect her art by improving the dimensions and measurements of her craftwork.
Beating hunger with baskets
It is no coincidence that these entrepreneurs sprang from the dry soil of Lupane District. The area is a farmer’s nightmare, yielding only drought-tolerant crops such as sorghum and finger millet. It receives inadequate rainfall — just 18-24 inches annually — to allow extensive maize cropping.
When the weather is bad, with long dry spells, rural communities suffer badly.
Statistics from the Department of Agriculture and Extension Services indicate that Lupane experiences annual food shortages. In 2008, it had a food production deficit of more than 10,000 metric tons of grain, producing just over 3,000 tons of cereal against an estimated annual requirement of 13,900 metric tons.
The situation has not changed seven years later. In 2015, scores of people are still at risk of hunger, with government data suggesting that only half of the region’s required 10,900 metric tons will be produced this year.
Families who practice subsistence agriculture will be forced to purchase food to make up for lower harvests, a situation that could leave many with no food at all given that income-generating opportunities are scarce.
This year, Zimbabwe is importing 700,000 tons of the staple maize grain to cover a deficit following another bad agricultural season. The country requires 1.8 million tons of maize annually.
The women’s centre in Lupane is now tackling these twin problems — hunger and livelihoods — by helping craftswomen become breadwinners.
Hildegard Mufukare, who manages the centre, said that putting women at the head of the household has created “peace in the home.”
“Women have bought assets from farm implements to cattle,” she said. “They have taken up agricultural activities and are working together with the men to sustain their families.”
Applying a communal grassroots approach to its management and up-keep, members contribute $5 annually toward operational costs, accounting for 31 percent of the centre’s required financing.
The remaining 59 percent comes from donors now, including patron backers like the Liechtenstein Development Services. Members said they plan to cultivate greater self-sufficiency by establishing and running a restaurant, conference center and farm which will serve the dual purpose of providing more food and skills to the community.
As they grow their basket markets overseas — members already courier their wares to clients in the U.S., Germany, the Netherlands, Australia and Denmark — securing additional funding will not be difficult.
Revenue from craft sales tripled over a two-year period, going from $10,000 in 2012 to $32,000 in 2014. The members keep the bulk of the profits, while the centre retains 15 percent to cover administration fees and government taxes.
The baskets are multi-functional, doubling as waste bins or fruit bowls. The women are now toying with the idea of weaving biodegradable coffins, to ensure sustainability even in their deaths.
Many are unsure how such an idea will be received, but their bold proposal suggests a commitment to holistic living that goes beyond income or nutrition.
Preparing for a changing climate
Community-led buffers against the horrors of climate change are desperately needed in Zimbabwe, a country of 14.5 million that faces a host of disasters from floods to droughts.
Unable to access adequate international climate finance, the country was forced to slice its environment ministry’s budget from $93 million in 2014 to $52 million this year.
The funding crunch has crippled the country’s ability to respond to natural disasters. The meteorological services department took a hit, which is responsible for forecasts and early warnings. This means that when calamity strikes, remote communities and especially rural women will be left to fend for themselves, a reality that the women of Lupane are more than prepared to deal with.
Siduduzile Nyoni, a mother of three who joined the cooperative in 2008, said that the simple act of weaving baskets has helped her build a lifeline for times of crisis.
She has used her savings to buy a goat and is also maintaining a chicken farm and a thriving vegetable garden. When the weather is fine, the garden feeds her family.
If it takes a turn for the worse, she simply dips into her surplus stores to tide her over until the land yields food again.
“I joined the centre even though I didn’t know how to weave,” she said. Her husband is unemployed, but she is doing well enough to support them both.
Nyoni and three other women have created their own micro-savings scheme, pooling $5 of their monthly income into a rotational pool of $20 that each enjoys on a quarterly basis.
Other groups of women have taken advantage of skills training at the centre such as potato farming, bee keeping, candle making and cattle rearing.
Rearing indigenous chickens is also a hugely popular activity as an additional source of revenue and nutrition.
Others have turned to small-scale farming so they don’t have to rely on central supply chains for their food. According to Lisina Moyo, who joined the centre in 2012, keyhole gardens “should be a part of every home.” The $15 per month she has earned from her personal vegetable patch has helped her pay her children’s school fees and allows her to contribute to a savings club that keeps her afloat during harsh seasons.
Saving the forests
Perhaps more importantly, the thousands of women who comprise the cooperative’s membership are natural caretakers of forests. They have practiced sustainable harvesting of forest products for years.
The art of basket weaving from both ilala palm and sisal, a species of the agave plant found in Zimbabwe’s forests whose tough fibers make strong rope and twine, has been passed down for generations.
Furthermore, local communities have traditionally relied on surrounding forests for medicines, timber, fuel and fruits, so they have a vested interest in protecting these rich zones of biodiversity.
Considering the country lost an estimated 327,000 hectares of forests annually between 1990 and 2010, according to the United Nations Environment Programme, empowering guardians of Zimbabwe’s remaining forested areas is crucial.
With an estimated 66,250 timber merchants operating throughout the country, as well as millions of rural families relying on forests for fuel, deforestation will be a defining issue for Zimbabwe in the coming decade.
But here again, the women of Lupane are planning for the worst, creating small plantations of ilala palms to ensure propagation of the species, even in the face of rapid destruction of its natural habitat.
Their work is reinforcing the land around them and breathing life into the women themselves.
As Moyo said: “Working together as women has united us and strengthened our community spirit.”