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« What Strength Looks Like | Main | Grateful »
Tuesday
Dec012009

Those Ladies

Odette tells the story of selling chickens and eggs as a child in order to care for the needs of herself and her friends in the refugee camps of Uganda.  By the time we finished, she likes to say.  We felt like those ladies from the big organizations who lend people money.

I always loved that part of the story--little girls feeling as powerful as grownups who were committed to making a change--but I didn't really know what she meant.  Until Tanzania.

In Tanzania, I met those ladies and immediately fell under their spell.  They are quiet, they are wise.  They are measured in their energy and fierce in their focus.  They are staring down poverty--its ravages, its sources, its brutal effects--and they know what to do.  They are executing their own particular brand of justice--passing over the one they are supposed to favor for that girl in the back with fire in her eyes.  They are placing their bets on that live wire, even as they readjust their enormous handbags and stamp the dust out of their fashionable shoes. 

They are believing the girls they choose can show the rest how to escape the bowels of hell. 

Meet Juliet, the program trainer for BEST.  It is her job to teach the entrepreneurial skills the poorest of the poor need to enter the market.  I watched as she checked in on all the women she serves, questioning them like your favorite aunt--the one who believes in you and at the same time won't mince words if you need to hear the truth.  She is tending them like a garden of possibility, one promising seedling at a time.

I don't always take a good picture, she told me. But I doubted it could possibly be true.  How could the camera not love this radiance?  How could the lens turn away from this bedrock determination that everything is going to be just fine?

Reader Comments (11)

So fantastic!
November 11, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterErin Wilson
WOW! I don't really know how, but I ended up with a Mondo Beyondo email in my inbox this morning and followed it to here - and I am so, so grateful I did :) A bit brain-numb after a week of crazy organisating to move back to South Africa and many sleepless nights with my little one, I'm not going to attempt to write anything profound enough to match this project of yours! But: simply, thank you.
Love,
Lisa
November 11, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLisa Roberts
These photos, posts, are rocking my world. These portraits, these women, refuse to let go of my heart.
November 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAnnette
I am really proud of Juliet. I know her personally she is one in a million
November 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMaria Tabitha
Julliet is one of the amazingly hardworking lady in tanzania, she has really devoted her committment and time to serve those who are struggling to move up out of poverty line.. a good role model of an African woman enterprenuers. Big up Julliet.
Samwel Ndauka.
December 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSamwel Ndauka
Beautiful, just beautiful. And exquisitely written. These posts bring tears to my eyes, hope to my heart, and awe to my mind; that women have the most incredible inner strength, power, resilience, beauty.

To learn about these amazing hearts and minds is a true blessing, thank you for telling these stories with such grace.
January 11, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterjungle girl
you are an artist and poet. I was touched in a deep place by your tanzania posts. I look forward to more.
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January 26, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterHannahCg
Thanks for your sweet,encouraging comments. You make me want to do even more
February 26, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterjuliet
Nevertheless lastly I realize all of this now.
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