Monday, June 20, 2011

Introduction to Handicrafts


Many of our members make beautiful traditional handicrafts, as do some of the orphaned heads of households and HIV+ women we support.

Handicraft skills are traditionally passed down from mother to daughter. YWCA members and beneficiaries also improve and develop their skills by attending vocational training courses. Our groups usually meet once a week to weave and sew together. They share techniques and create new designs together. As they work, they also talk about what is happening in their lives, discuss problems and share experiences.


The income from selling handicrafts supplements subsistence farming. The women use it to pay school fees and health insurance and to buy cloth and foods they cannot grow.

Introduction to YWCA Rwanda

YWCA Rwanda is striving for a world where all women live free from poverty and where they and their rights are respected.

A group of thirty women set up the organisation in 1995 to support people widowed or orphaned by the genocide.

We now have 1,450 members and have helped 20,000 vulnerable people across four of Rwanda's five provinces.

Our mission is to develop the leadership and collective power of women and girls in Rwanda to achieve high quality education, health and socio-economic conditions for themselves and their communities.

YWCA Rwanda is affiliated to World YWCA and is a member of YWCA's East African Network. We are a non-governmental, non-profit organisation.