There are more than 100 women at the Bliss Women and Children Project. These women work extremely hard at micro projects that are often the only way to sustain their families. Some of them sell vegetables. Others cut hair, hawk cheap clothes or clean houses.
It is an incredible juggling act. In most cases these women are their families' sole breadwinner. They wake up at the crack of dawn and work all day, just to arrive at the same point as they were the day before. Choose to sponsor one of these projects, and you will help an entire family to move beyond the point of mere subsistence, and build themselves a better future.
It doesn’t cost much. Sponsoring a woman’s project costs just $35 USD per month. But the difference it will make for an entire family is incredible. This amount will ensure this woman can sustain and develop her business – which, in turn, will allow her to feed and clothe her family, send the children to school, and improve their overall standard of living.
This is an investment. Sponsor a woman’s project and you will become a partner in an initiative whose benefits will even extend beyond a single family to include the entire community. Your $35 a month will also help fund business training classes that will help women throughout the community to improve their small businesses. If you have any questions about sponsoring a woman’s project, please contact Janet Ilott at blisswomencp@yahoo.com. On behalf of everyone at the Bliss Women and Children Project, we thank you for your generosity.
Women's Projects:
Age: 40 Number of Children: 6 Project: Gladys is a very busy lady! She has two small businesses – selling clothes and operating a kiosk! She also volunteers as a cook at BWCP, where she helps cook for the more than 80 children who attend our preschool, PLUS she is raising six kids! In spite of her busy schedule, Gladys is always smiling and seems to have an endless amount of energy! Her projects currently generate approximately 100 kshs per day in profit. Investing in this project would allow her to expand her kiosk and diversify the produce she sells.
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Age: 42 Number of Children: 2 Project: Rose sells vegetables at a roadside kiosk in Kaptembwo. But in Kaptembwo, the word “road” must be interpreted loosely- in this region, the roads are nothing more than beaten paths, and Rose’s days are filled with the dust, heat and noise that are Kaptembwo. The 150 kshs she receives in profit each day helps sustain her family. Invest in this project, and Rose will be able to expand her kiosk and diversify the produce she sells. |
Age: 38 Number of Children: 5 Project: Harriet supports her family of five children by raising chickens. She sells the chickens and their eggs.
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Age: 32 Number of Children: 3 Project: Lynette is very well-loved at BWCP. She is very involved in the project, never misses a single meeting, and volunteers as our treasurer. Lynette sustains her family by selling vegetables outside the gate of their home. Investment would allow her to rent a kiosk and expand her business.
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Age: 35 Number of Children: 7 Project: Susan is a hairdresser. However, she lost her hair salon in the clashes that affected Investment would allow Susan to rent a salon.
| Age: 38 Number of Children: 4 Project: Mary is a hairdresser. She does not have her own salon, but has a spot in the street. Like most hairdressers, Mary has a lot of patience – a good characteristic, as hairstyling in |
Age: 29 Number of Children: 7 Project: Josephine is a talented seamstress, who makes uniforms for the children at the BWCP preschool. She also supports her family of seven children by selling vegetables at a kiosk outside her house. An investment in this project would allow her to purchase a better sewing machine.
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Age: 61 Number of Children: 6 + grandchildren Project: Rose makes baskets and handbags at BWCP, a project that allows her to demonstrate her creativity. She also sells charcoal in the hot, dusty roads of Kaptembwo – a project that earns her about 70-120 kshs per day. Rose would like to improve her current conditions by renting a kiosk – something that sponsorship would allow her to do.
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Age: 54 Number of Children: 9 Project: This is a slow, painstaking process, and it can take up to two days to make a single one. An investment in this project would give
| Age: 42 Number of Children: 1 Project: Benta is also part of our basket and handbag making project. She spends hours crocheting beautiful handicrafts. She also sells fish at a kiosk in the local market. An investment in her projects would give Banta a chance to better her life and that of her family.
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Age: 35 Number of Children: 4 Project: Ruth participates in our yarn-making project. While spinning wheels are a thing of the past in developed countries, in | Age: 30 Number of Children: 5 Project: Like so many people in
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Age: 40 Number of Children: 5 Project: Grace supports her family by keeping chickens. She makes money from selling the eggs and the chickens. Some days she makes money – other days Grace and her family get nothing. Investing in this project would give Grace the freedom to think about how she can improve her project to make it more sustainable.
| Age: 41 Number of Children: 6 Project: Hannah is supporting a family of six children – four of her own, and two orphans whom she has taken in. She does her best to meet their needs by hawking clothes. Every two weeks, she makes the eight-hour to-and-fro trip between Nakuru and
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Name: Josephine Mbone Age: 38 Number of Children: 3 Project: Josephine is one of our happiest members, with a non-stop smile, and an endless amount of energy. She supports her family of three children by selling vegetables at the side of the road.
She does not have a kiosk, but instead spreads the produce out on a tarp, and squats by the side of the road. Investment in this project would allow her to rent a kiosk and increase her revenues.
| Age: 28 Number of Children: 2 Project: Joyce makes chips and sells them by the side of the road. You can imagine what this is like – every morning, she wakes up early to start peeling the potatoes. Then, she spends hours stooped in front of the fire, only to sell a few chips by the side of a dusty road. For her trouble, Joyce makes about 50 kshs – less than $1 USD per day. An investment in this project will give Joyce the opportunity to improve her project and consider, then follow, the steps she can take to increase her income.
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Age: 42 Number of Children: 5 Project: Grace’s entire family is currently living off 100 kshs per day – approximately $1.25 USD. This is the profit she makes from two small businesses - selling vegetables and making and selling chips. It is very hard work, and an investment in Grace’s projects would help her and her family to take that first, most important step to get ahead.
| Age: 38 Number of Children: 2 Project: Alima is a saleswoman. She buys clothes in |
Age: 38 Number of Children: 5 Project: Grace is one of the incredibly patient women who spends hours every day crocheting baskets and handbags for sale. She also sustains her family through a poultry project, where she keeps chickens, and sells the eggs and the chickens. From these projects she makes about $1USD per day. An investment in this project will allow Grace to build a chicken coop and make other changes to improve her businesses.
| Age: 46 Number of Children: 6 Project: In Nakuru, many people use charcoal stoves, due to the prohibitive cost of gas. Jane sells charcoal and vegetables in the street. Investing in this project would allow Jane to rent a kiosk.
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Age: 28 Number of Children: 3 Project: Gladys participates in our cake-making project. Under this initiative, the women make small heart-shaped cakes that are absolutely delicious! As you can see by the picture, the equipment we use is very different than ovens that can be found in
| Age: 38 Number of Children: 4 Project: Grace participates in our basket-making project. She also sells vegetables by the roadside, where she spends her days sitting in the dust and chaos that is Kaptembwa. An investment in her project would allow her to rent a kiosk.
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Age: 39 Number of Children: 6 Project: Janet is part of our basket and handbag-making project. She also sells small fish called Omena. Omena measure about two inches long and are found in
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Age: 38 Number of Children: 3 Project: Doricas participates in our handbag and basket-making project, where she spends hours weaving beautiful baskets and bags out of recycled plastic. She also sells vegetables by the roadside.
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Name: Isnas Fidi Age: 40 Number of Children: 5 Project: Isnas supports her family of five children by making baskets and selling vegetables by the side of the road. From both of these projects, she makes 50 kshs per day (less than $1 USD). Life is extremely difficult for this family, and investing in Isnas’ vegetable selling project, would allow them to take one step out of extreme poverty. | Name: Lynette Cherotich Age: 38 Number of Children: 5 Project: Lynette makes and sells the most beautiful table cloths. It is hard to capture in words the beauty of what she produces – imagine someone who lives surrounded by dirt and poverty producing a cloth that is flawlessly made, soft to the touch, and imbued with the most startlingly beautiful colours. An investment in Lynette’s project will allow her to continue expressing her soul and creativity.
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Age: 38 Number of Children: 3 Project: Leah raises goats. She supports her family by selling the goats’ milk and selling the goats.
Investment in this project would allow Leah to increase her herd by purchasing more goats. Goats can be purchased in
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Age: 42 Number of Children: 5 Project: Sarah is a little more fortunate than many of the women participating in our project, as her family owns a plot of land. She uses this land to raise cows, and supports her family by selling the cows and their milk. Investment in this project would allow Sarah to ensure the animals get proper veterinary care, and better feed, and would also allow Sarah to diversify her project by purchasing other animals (such as chickens).
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Age: 36 Number of Children: 3 Project: Mercy is the star of our cake-baking project. Every day, she spends hours in our kitchen making delicious cakes. Then, she heads into the center of Nakuru, where she walks from place to place, selling bags of five cakes for 30 kshs. Part of the profits are then invested back in the project.
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