Helping Marginalized Entrepreneurs Build Businesses from Tanzania to Peru

What we've been up to

This year was an especially big year for our projects in Tanzania and Peru. In Tanzania, our WAUMAKI Kisiwani women’s group is kick-starting their business near the ruins of one of East Africa’s greatest empires. In Peru, SPI hosted a launch event for our long-awaited ESCALA Business School. The men and women attending ESCALA are participating in intensive workshops, teaching them how to successfully build a business model that sells products profitably and sustainably. With your continued support, local entrepreneurs and their families are enjoying a holiday season filled with joy thanks to new opportunities and sustainable income made possible by SPI projects.

This September, the members of our WAUMAKI KISIWANI initiative participated in a citizen science project, collecting ethnographic data on historic wells and coastal history around the site of Kilwa Kisiwani.

This September, the members of our WAUMAKI KISIWANI initiative participated in a citizen science project, collecting ethnographic data on historic wells and coastal history around the site of Kilwa Kisiwani.

Empowering More Women with ESCALA

Eager participants attend the ESCALA Business School launch event near Lima, Peru.

Eager participants attend the ESCALA Business School launch event near Lima, Peru.

Our capacity building program has successfully trained and aided numerous women and others in Tanzania, Guatemala and Peru to be entrepreneurs and business people. Our curriculum’s success has led to the establishment of SPI’s ESCALA Business School! (ESCALA is the Spanish word for ladder, and stands for Escuela de Negocios para la Conservación y Avance de Latino América).

We are starting in Pachacamac, Peru, site of the ancient pan-Andean pilgrimage center, where 50 participants were accepted out of 109 applicants to partake in this innovative program designed to empower disadvantaged entrepreneurs across the country.

ESCALA not only teaches participants how to manage their own businesses sustainably, but it also teaches them how to earn a living wage for themselves and their employees. Over half the participants already run a business of some sort and over 70% of ESCALA Business School attendees are women! Completing ESCALA will allow people from impoverished areas to take advantage of business opportunities that can successfully lift them and their communities out of poverty.

WAUMAKI Kisiwani Opens For Business in Tanzania

Kilwa Kisiwani is a UNESCO World Heritage site on Tanzania’s south coast with occupation dating back to the 8th Century AD.

Kilwa Kisiwani is a UNESCO World Heritage site on Tanzania’s south coast with occupation dating back to the 8th Century AD.

The ruins of Kilwa Kisiwani are located on a small island off the coast of southeastern Tanzania where thousands of tourists visit each year. The site of Kilwa holds tremendous cultural and historic significance to the local community and visitors alike. Although Kilwa receives a significant number of tourists, the local community is struggling to take advantage of this economic opportunity due to limited business skills.

SPI is partnering with a group of women living near the site to create the WAUMAKI Kisiwani project aimed at empowering female entrepreneurs invested in preserving cultural heritage and building a better future for themselves. Local stewardship and economic benefit are vital for tourism to be sustainable at Kilwa Kisiwani.

WAUMAKI is an acronym for WAnawake Utamaduni, na MAgofu KIlwa Kiswani loosely meaning women, culture, and ruins in the Swahili language. The women have attended SPI’s mini business school in order to develop their existing craft and culinary skills, create new products and recipes, and train in business and marketing techniques. The WAUMAKI Kisiwani office is due to open soon, so stay tuned for more updates in the coming weeks! Read more here.

WUAMAKI members prepared and sold a traditional dish of pickled mango and roasted fish for maritime archaeologists visiting the site. Come and try it!

WUAMAKI members prepared and sold a traditional dish of pickled mango and roasted fish for maritime archaeologists visiting the site. Come and try it!

Prosperous Futures Start With You

With the holiday season upon us, we invite you to help us bring basic business education to more women and other marginalized entrepreneurs so they can sustainably and independently run and grow their own businesses. Your donations lifts dedicated e…

With the holiday season upon us, we invite you to help us bring basic business education to more women and other marginalized entrepreneurs so they can sustainably and independently run and grow their own businesses. Your donations lifts dedicated entrepreneurs out of poverty, leading them to become more resilient communities and protectors of their own heritage.

So many of our cultural legacies are being destroyed for economic exploitation: looting, agriculture, mining, energy extraction, commercial use, and residential developments just to name a few. Amid all the discussion of heritage loss, it can be daunting to imagine how we can save archeological sites. The best way is to empower more women and train more entrepreneurs. With your help, that's what we will do!

Contribute here or send a check to the address below. Thank you for all that you do!

Larry Coben
Sustainable Preservation Initiative
40 West 22nd St., 11th Floor
New York, NY 10010

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