In Host Country Lebanon, Refugee and Rural Women Build Entrepreneurship, Cohesion and Future
Kamal is among more than 1.5 million refugees from Syria and its neighbouring countries, hosted by Lebanon. The massive influx of refugees accounts for 25 per cent of the total population in Lebanon and puts unprecedented pressure on the Lebanese economy. There is an ever-increasing demand for public services and significantly stronger competition for limited resources and employment.
Women, both Lebanese citizens and refugees, often suffer more discrimination due to the prevalence of prejudiced laws and cultural stereotypes. They are frequently either restricted at home, or relegated to finding low and unstable income within the informal sector without social protection.
To improve women's access to employment and markets, the Amel Association, a grantee of UN Women's Fund for Gender Equality, implemented a three-year project from 2012 – 2015 in the south of Lebanon and the suburbs of Beirut. The project has impacted over 1,000 rural and refugee women, who have learned how to create, brand and commercialize high-quality handicrafts, such as embroidery and accessories, organic and agro-food products, following the highest quality and sanitation standards.
"We started seeing real results of our work when some of the women started creating their own products and started exhibiting them. They grew stronger, more confident and set inspiring examples for other women in the area," says Safaa Al Ali, Programme Manager at the Amel Association.
The organization facilitated an alliance with 13 other civil society organizations and cooperatives doing similar work to create the first economic network for women in Lebanon, called "MENNA" (meaning "from us" in Arabic language). Today, more than 300 refugee and rural Lebanese women producers sell soaps, candles, accessories and handicrafts directly to the public in a shop in Beirut also named MENNA.
"I came to Lebanon as the crisis began in Syria five years ago…it was hard to find a suitable job as a refugee and I could not access the formal business sector," shares Mona Hamid, a 51-year-old Syrian refugee living in the suburbs of Beirut. "By joining the MENNA network at Amel, I gained skills to sell and promote my items at local businesses and also showed them at exhibitions."
The success of the initiative prompted Amel to create a MENNA catering service in February 2016, opening up more income-generating opportunities for women.
Notes Amel Association International (2013). Unpublished study on "Gender analysis of Host Communities affected by Syrian Refugee Crisis"
This story was replicated from the UN Women website http://www.unwomen.org/. IPS is an official partner of UN Women's Step It Up! Media Compact.
© Inter Press Service (2016) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
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