Our Work in Haiti
Repaying a loan is a source of great pride.
Nearly four years ago, Freedom from Hunger resolved to stand shoulder-to-shoulder
with Haitian women who were ready to help themselves and their families toward
a better future. Funded by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP),
Freedom from Hunger identified four local partners with which to work, two
of them ready to implement Credit with Education. With the help of its donors, Freedom from Hunger has been able to continue this work.
Based in Port-au-Prince, our local partner, ACLAM (Action Contre La Misère),
is bringing Credit with Education to 6,137 women in four rural regions, including
the country's poorest region, the Northwest. The program is unusual because
it was selected to pilot a community-based distribution initiative in which
women are trained as volunteers to provide information on family planning
and to sell contraceptives in their communities.
Most recently, Freedom from Hunger has responded to a request by ACLAM to
help develop new financial services for people who are both very poor and
HIV+. We are now working with ACLAM to meet the needs of two types of HIV+
people who live in ACLAM’s service area. The first of the two new services
is aimed at the very poorest and least-experienced HIV+ entrepreneurs. The
service will help groups of these entrepreneurs organize, train them to save
money and then to pool their savings to provide loans to each other. Loans
will be very small ($15 or less) and can be repaid over a six-month period.
The loans will be insured by group guarantee. Both HIV+ people and their family
members will be invited to join the groups. The second service will target
HIV+ people and their family members who are slightly better off and have
more experience with managing microenterprises. The source of loans to these
groups will be ACLAM’s loan capital.