“I didn’t have a bank account anywhere, I had even never set foot in a bank because of fear, but now I advise and take other women to the bank to open their account.”
Gulzar
From having nothing to graduating from poverty
Not long after she was married, Gulzar was abandoned by her husband. He left Bangladesh illegally and never came back. That left Gulzar with a three-month-old daughter in her arms and in much distress.
Later, World Vision started implementing the Gender Inclusive Pathways Out of Poverty (GPOP) project in Gulzar’s community. GPOP aims to increase the income of ultra-poor households in communities vulnerable to climate change, improve their food security and nutrition, while also promoting financial, social and gender inclusion.
Currently, the project is ‘graduating’ households out of poverty through an adapted ultra-poor graduation approach, which takes place over 24 months. Graduation criteria include income generation, meeting basic needs, financial inclusion, disaster risk reduction (DRR), gender equality and social inclusion. To ensure households continue to progress up the economic ladder after graduation, GPOP also supports them to participate and benefit from economic markets, with a strong focus on women’s economic empowerment.
For the first four months in GPOP, Gulzar and other families were provided with cash assistance to meet their needs. Then they would receive training on homestead gardening. After seven months, World Vision provided 15 chickens to Gulzar’s family, with the condition that she take part in building the chicken shed. That was how Gulzar started her journey out of poverty. Now she can sustain herself as well as her daughter, including affording her education. Moreover, through selling goats and chickens, she was able to save enough money to build her own house.
Besides keeping chickens and goats, Gulzar also sells the birds and their eggs at a market in her village. The market is managed by community members, and prices are regulated so that the producers would not suffer losses. Moreover, as it was not possible in the local context for women to go out and conduct businesses in markets far away from home, and there were extra costs in transporting her animals, buying and selling in this easily accessible market close to her home has helped Gulzar reduce expenses and ensure her safety.
“My life was in ruins. After being abandoned I felt I had lost my footing and the ground on which I stood. I had no hope to live for. Now, I feel as though I have four feet standing on solid ground,” says Gulzar.
Gulzar is a role model in her community and has become a strong leader who can earn her own living, prepare her own budget and make savings. “I didn’t have a bank account anywhere, I had even never set foot in a bank because of fear, but now I advise and take other women to the bank to open their account,” she says with a bright smile.
Gulzar’s biggest hope is that her daughter Tammana would not have to experience traumas like hers. “Due to extreme poverty and my parents’ lack of awareness, I could not receive an education and develop my potential, but Tammana will become a doctor,” she says while proudly looking at her daughter.