The Maa Bead work women receiving donations in 2020 during the closure of their business due to Covid 19, (Photo courtesy The Maa Trust)

 

By Lenah Bosibori

Narok County, Kenya: The I&M Bank Foundation has partnered with The Maa Trust a community-based organization to donate Kshs 1 million to boost their income due to the effects of Covid 19 that rendered them jobless. 

The Maa Beadwork is a social enterprise that engages 579 Maasai women in an environmentally sustainable livelihood that aims to diversify and increase household income streams lifting families out of poverty.

The Maa Trust has exhausted all the money raised through the first appeal, and so the money donated by I&M Bank Foundation, under its Economic Empowerment pillar is a big break for Maa Beadwork. 

The money is intended to support Maa Beadwork women and contribute towards the reduction of gender inequality through women’s empowerment; reduce household environmental impacts, and; improve perceptions of conservation and wildlife.

The 1M cash injection will help Maa Beadwork to, develop the institutional capacity and marketing strategy for Maa Beadwork, expand product range and stock availability, facilitate Maa Beadwork members to utilize their income effectively through the Sustainable Spending program, and coordinate capacity building for Maa Beadwork members.

The Maa Beadwork purchases all raw materials, then a Maa Beadwork staff member takes the required materials and product cards to the villages where they meet with a beading group (comprised of 20-40 women), and the work is distributed. 

The artisans are paid a pre-agreed price for the beading of each item, which is determined by the amount of time required. This piecemeal payment system is based on a daily rate of KES 500 / USD 5. 

When the beaded products are returned to the Maa Beadwork offices, the item is finished and labeled. The ladies are paid for their work systematically, regardless of whether the item that they produced has already been sold or not.

Like many businesses in Kenya, Maa Beadwork has been greatly affected by COVID -19. The main market for Maa beadwork in the Maasai Mara is the tourism industry; because of the drastic decline in visitor numbers, sales are 74 percent down in 2020 as compared to 2019. 

The Maa Bead work women receiving donations in 2020 during the closure of their business due to Covid 19, (Photo courtesy The Maa Trust)

In March The Maa Trust made the difficult decision to close. This decision was made for the safety of their team, and to adhere to government regulations enacted to prevent the spread of Covid-19 in Kenya. 

The closure of The Maa Trust meant that the women engaged in Maa Beadwork and other social enterprises were no longer getting any work or income, exacerbating deepening household poverty.

During this lockdown period, The Maa Trust distributed $19,500 worth of food to the members of Maa Beadwork and Trust’s other social enterprises. During this food distribution exercise, the women kept asking them when they can return to work. In June, Maa Beadwork resumed production. 

As their main beadwork market, tourism, has been decimated by the virus, they had very few orders to be released for the ladies to make. 

They, therefore, launched a fundraising appeal to get the ladies back to work creating a stockpile for Maa Beadwork so that rather than having to make each order when it is placed, orders can be released quickly, and they can make sure that their shop is always fully stocked.

Through this initial fundraising appeal, they were able to raise $17,000.

The Maa Trust is a non-profit organization working with community-owned conservancies in the Maasai Mara, Kenya. 

They work to increase the benefits of wildlife and conservation to Maasai families so that they appreciate and contribute to the protection of, wild animals on their land.