Sunday, May 8, 2011

Buy Yourself These Handmade Totebags and Help a Family



Several families in Africa was suffering from fatal diseases. Parents can't feed their children because of poverty. Be aware of this unpleasant situation and contribute something to help them. Your support can greatly raise and sustain the needs of each family in Africa. Buy these handmade tote bags and be touch of their stories.

Know the story of each bag and feel great. When you procure our bags, you provide a sustainable income for women who desire meaningful work and fair wages and dignity through accomplishment. Many, though not all, are HIV/AIDS widows who live with their children in Kibera, one of the largest slums in Africa. Due to the AIDS pandemic on this continent, orphaned children are raising orphaned children. This is a catastrophe the Global Bag Project team would like to help prevent. In the slums, health care is inadequate; no waste management systems exist. Electricity is erratic. Clean water supplies are scarce and drinking water is often impure. Survival obviously is an every day struggle.

HIV/AIDS widows or not, all our bag-producers seek a better life for their families. Hard workers, often amazingly joyful, each woman takes pride in performing good work, and all are grateful to be able to provide basic necessities for their growing families. With just a little help, hidden entrepreneurial skills begin to rise to the surface. We encourage our bag-producers to find local markets for their products.

Remember these women and their families each time you carry your Global Bag Project handmade tote bags.

Buy African Handmade Totebags and Feed a Family



Imagine how great it is using those handmade tote bags while you were able to support the needs of those unfortunate families? You definitely had given your share on giving the new generation a bright future. Those people who made these handmade tote bags were able to find stable employment and thus providing their family's daily needs.

Listen to the story of each bag. When you procure our bags, you provide a sustainable income for women who desire meaningful work and fair wages and dignity through accomplishment. Many, though not all, are HIV/AIDS widows who live with their children in Kibera, one of the largest slums in Africa. Due to the AIDS pandemic on this continent, orphaned children are raising orphaned children. This is a catastrophe the Global Bag Project team would like to help prevent. In the slums, health care is inadequate; no waste management systems exist. Electricity is erratic. Clean water supplies are scarce and drinking water is often impure. Survival obviously is an every day struggle.

HIV/AIDS widows or not, all our bag-producers seek a better life for their families. Hard workers, often amazingly joyful, each woman takes pride in performing good work, and all are grateful to be able to provide basic necessities for their growing families. With just a little help, hidden entrepreneurial skills begin to rise to the surface. We encourage our bag-producers to find local markets for their products.

Remember these women and their families each time you carry your Global Bag Project African bags.

Each African Handmade Totebag has a story



With the urge to help the needy and impoverished, Karen Mains and some of her friends who shared the same vision started the  Global Bag Project. This ministry effort organized a cooperative bag-making project, better known as Africa Bags, which started in Nairobi,Kenya. Their goal is link that part of the world with us in a pragmatic way. As a result, micro-industries in Kenya, similar to the ones that once dotted the American landscape and supplemented our own economy during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, have sprung up, bringing life and hope to hundreds of women in Kenya.
Each bag that made is a symbol of the struggle of a Kenyan woman. Thus, each handmade tote bags has a story behind it. Here are some of those stories:Abandoned by her husband, Jecintere was overwhelmed by the responsibility of taking care of her  baby, Patience. She didn’t have ajob. Then she discovered about the Africa Bag program and realized that she could become her own boss. It wasn’t long until she was producing handmade tote bags, and caring for both herself and little Patience.An HIV widow and mother of two daughters, Jennifer was rejected by her in-laws after her husband died because she wouldn’t marry her husband’s brother. Without a home, she left Kibera where she lived, and went to the city to start a new life. She knew of the Africa Bags Project, and found the answer to her prayers.Hannah is a 37-year-old widow. She is also a single mother of six, ranging in age from 21 down to four, including two sets of twins! She is a hard worker, and in September 2010, she showed just how dedicated she is when Global Bag Project Kenya Project Coordinator Mary Ogalo and I - along with seamstresses Salome and Sophie, who are in the GBP sewing cooperative with Hannah - visited her. Hannah rents a two-room home in the Dagoretti Corner of west Nairobi, one of the city’s many low-income neighborhoods.