Saturday 13 January 2018

Recycling: NGO SOW & G Empowers Indigent Lagos Women



 If only everyone could see the massive wealth obtainable from discarded products, perhaps none would retain the title of ‘the poor’ in the world anymore. That seems to be the message passed across by a budding women and girls empowerment NGO, The Save Our Women and Girls Foundation  (SOW&G) when it set out on its latest empowerment drive. The Lagos-based organization recently held a series of free empowerment trainings for communities across the state, training women on how to turn waste products into beautiful, usable materials and generating wealth with them.

The community-based initiatives tagged -Trash 2 Wealth -empowered women in four Lagos communities namely: Sangotedo, Badore, Langbasa, and Ikota. SOW&G, supported by FABE International Foundation, trained a total of 142 women. The initiative, besides empowering the indigent, all-female beneficiaries, according to the organizers, was a move to drive effective and sustainable handling of waste products. This is against the background of the current gloomy global realities of environmental threats arising from the avalanche of non-degradable waste products. Lagos, the highly industrialized and densely populated ‘economic nerve-centre of Nigeria’ is among the affected.

 This is also in line with the Sustainable Development Goals: Agenda 2030 of the United Nations on Environment, Climate Change, Health and poverty. The training did not only teach women how to eradicate waste from their environment, but it also enlightened them on the possibility of a healthier lifestyle and an option of financial freedom. It was facilitated by Mrs. Temitope Okunnu, the founder of FABE International Foundation (aka the Environmentalist Queen). She took participants through the importance of recycling and up-cycling of waste materials. The participants were excited when the facilitating team, demonstrated how plastic bottles could be creatively up-cycled into other useful materials such as kitchen stools and tables while discarded rubber tyres, pet bottles and covers were creatively re-used and made into household decorations. The empowered women were also admonished to mentor other women/girls in turn to keep the empowerment train in motion.

 United Nations Peace Ambassador, writer and entrepreneur and founder of SOW&G, Ambassador Unyime-Ivy King said she was motivated to organize the training as a way of improving the lives of women in the target communities so as to build sustainable means of income by creatively ‘up-cycling and recycling the often over-looked trashes in their environments’.
‘No doubt, an empowered woman empowers humanity, and that has been my driving force,’ said Ambassador (Mrs.) King. ‘Besides, we wanted to teach them how to creatively manage the wastes generated in their homes so they could have cleaner environments, healthier lifestyles and improve the aesthetics of their environment,’ she added. Besides bringing in FABE, a noted organization in recycling training and environmental sustainability, SOW&G, according to her, sought the co-operation of the Baales (traditional chiefs) in the various communities towards a resoundingly successful outing. Her NGO, she revealed, plans to hold bigger trainings in 2018 and would appreciate institutional supports to expand the reach and horizon of the empowerment initiative.

                                    
The recent training is one of the many projects embarked upon by SOW&G. The foundation has held several other projects including the Women Empowerment Skills Training (W.E.S.T), Camp Creative (for young people), among others held in both Lagos and Akwa Ibom States, which have so far benefitted thousands of people, especially women, girls and children in a humanitarian bid to offer practical skills and empowerment mostly to the economically disadvantaged thereby giving them a voice while strengthening social services and increasing awareness of women’s rights.