Books as seeds for change
In rural Zimbabwe, women are using books to take charge of their families’ futures.
For subsistence farmers, finding the money to purchase even simple commodities like soap or sugar can be incredibly hard, let alone having enough to pay for a child’s school fees.
In Zimbabwe, books you help to send are being used by our partner Edward Ndlovu Memorial Library to support income generation projects in rural communities in the Gwanda region. One community has developed a ‘nutrition garden’ growing vegetables to sell.
Here, Jackson the Director of Edward Ndlovu Memorial Library and women’s group leader Tofiro told us how books are helping their garden and their families to flourish:
Jackson: Our work at Edward Ndlovu Memorial Library includes supporting schools in rural areas by donating books from Book Aid International. We discovered that the communities around these schools were not gainfully employed. The majority of people there had very little to do in terms of generating their own income. The whole area is almost 100% unemployed and people live on subsistence farming.
Tofiro: Life was very difficult. If your child or grandchild came from school and said “I don’t have a pen or pencil to write with”, we didn’t have any cent, any penny with which to help the child. Even if you felt sick, you had no money to use to go and buy tablets. Or simpler still, you couldn’t even have money to buy sugar so that you have tea.
Jackson: So we went into deep discussions with villages – what would they possibly do on their own that we could support. We invited them to form groups.
Tofiro: As women in the village, we were realising the difficulties of getting fresh vegetables, so we came together with a common challenge of getting fresh vegetables. We agreed to ask for this piece of land to start a garden so that we have got a supply of fresh vegetables.
Jackson: The initial stage of forming the group was to suggest they engage in reading. They discuss two books at a time – one is about growing crops and the other is about a topic such as health or how to get a birth certificate.
At the beginning of the year, the women will come up with a plan of what they will discuss each month. At the moment they are reading about HIV and AIDS. They have also done a lot of reading around rights – rights to education, rights to health, to water, to inheritance. It gives them more security. All these are topics they can now raise on their own and defend themselves. Whatever topic they discuss, they will have a supporting book to use as their foundation.
They will also use books to look at what to plant. At the moment they are looking at planting potatoes. So using a book, they will discuss why grow potatoes, do they have enough water, the soil you need for potatoes. And once they agree they will plant potatoes, they then agree when is the best time to plant them.
Tofiro: We get a lot of assistance from reading books that help us to manage the garden. We take the books from the school library. When we come to the garden, having read about a particular disease and find our crops showing the symptoms of what we have read, we quickly come up with the solution.
We would have serious problems if we had no books. It would mean we would have to depend on someone to tell us what to do all the time.
Jackson: They have got schools and business people coming here to order vegetables and it’s generating income
Tofiro: We are now able to sell what we are growing here and we have got money with which we pay school fees, we are able to run our households with the income we are getting here. Now we have a friendly home where we sit together with our husbands and provide for each other.
In the future, we hope to leave this project to our grandchildren. We are working hard to make sure that we create an impression with our grandchildren so that they take over this garden when we are old.”
Read more stories like this one
Books to give hope
Nessrine is a teacher in Beirut, Lebanon. Earlier this year she told us about the difference books were making to the children she teaches.
Read moreThe transformative power of books
A teacher and reading champion, Joyce Ampofo is the founder and Chief Executive of Rainbow Trust Foundation, one of Book Aid International’s partners in Ghana. This is her story.
Read moreGrowing a lifetime love of reading
At the launch of MYSA’s “Little Hands, Big Steps” project we met Caroline who told us what it will mean for her family. This is her story.
Read more