by Bo Christoffer Brekke
Twenty-five years later, they proudly invite guests into the family’s brick home on their own land in their home village, with the harvest from their own rice field drying in the courtyard outside. Their two children have completed university degrees, picking up career opportunities that would have been distant dreams for their parents in 1997.
One of the factors driving this family’s journey has been that Komola became one of the very first women to work for OTHERS back in 1997. The job gave her the opportunity to earn an income of her own for the first time, helping to put the family on the path to where they are today.
Generating opportunity
OTHERS artisans are engaged through relationships with local Salvation Army programs that focus on economic development in rural and urban settings—with a particular focus on women. OTHERS currently has active production groups in Bangladesh and Kenya, where the former has remained the biggest producer country since the beginning as a local Salvation Army initiative there in 1997. There are currently around 618 artisans in Bangladesh who are involved in production for OTHERS, along with 343 artisans in Kenya.
OTHERS’ history has been one of trial and error, exploring numerous opportunities and restrategizing when initiatives haven’t achieved the desired results. In the big picture, however, the 25-year journey of OTHERS has been one of steady expansion and consolidation. Production capacity quickly outgrew the local market in Bangladesh, and the first steps to expand to the international market were made in the early 2000s. A significant milestone was reached in 2011 when a new partnership with Trade Central became the entry point to North America—an opening which has continued to generate ever wider opportunities since.
Having a positive impact
A job is often about much more than just an income. It’s about empowerment, about the dignity that lies in learning and perfecting a skill, in having the fruit of one’s labor valued by someone else. The testimonies of OTHERS artisans invariably contain the same ingredients: the income earned through OTHERS helps them meet daily needs, invest in household improvements, purchase livestock, start businesses, and most importantly, send children to school.
Christine from the Dorcus Beads group in Kenya shares, “I used to live in a grass hut but have now been able to build a house as a result of being part of OTHERS.”
While Famines and Christine represent the majority of OTHERS artisans—women from low-income backgrounds—partnerships with other existing projects and initiatives help OTHERS to incorporate specific vulnerable groups as well, such as refugees living in Nairobi, Kenya, or women who have been exploited in the sex industry in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Looking to the future
As consumers, we all have at least a little bit of power to influence the world for better or for worse.
In buying OTHERS products from Trade Central or usa.tradeforhope.com—for yourself, for an event, or as the perfect gifts for others—you can be part of the next 25 years of the OTHERS journey, helping facilitate many more stories like Komola’s.
To purchase items from the OTHERS program, visit shop.salvationarmy.org or usa.tradeforhope.com.