Practical session during the training |
An NGO, Ecological Balance, has trained over 40 women and
young girls to produce environmentally friendly menstrual pads, alongside a
host of economically empowering products.
The
five-day training seminar which commenced on Monday, February 24, at Apostolic
Church Bomaka, had over 40 women and girls in attendance.
Speaking
to the press after the event, the Executive Director of Ecological Balance,
Blessing Limbi Tata, said: “the purpose of the training was to empower women
and give them the necessary skills to be able to be contributing partners in
their homes and to their communities.”
She
lauded the commitment of women and young girls to the skill-acquisition
training. “On the first day, we had a lot of young girls, because we were
concentrating on young girls of menstruating age. We wanted to take away the
shame from menstruation and give them the alternative.
“We are
all Cameroonians and we know what is happening. Suddenly, pads have become a
luxury. There are so many families that cannot even afford food. So just to buy
a pad these days is very difficult.
“So on
the first day, we educated girls on menstrual hygiene and health. We also
distributed cloth pads. That day, we had the highest turnout, because a lot of
young girls came and received our designed cloth pads. It was not only pads,
but environmentally friendly pads. These are pads that can be washed and
reused. They are sustainable in the long run.”
Limbi
lauded the seriousness of the women, who, apart from learning menstrual
hygiene, also learned how to produce drinks, body lotions, detergents, cloth
pads, clothes and other products consumed in their households.
The women were encouraged not only to produce for their
household use, but also to commercialise the products to improve their economic
conditions.
Limbi
encouraged the girls to switch to pads, which are comparatively cheap,
comfortable and environmentally friendly.
Commenting
on the training they received during the workshop, one of the participants,
Patience Ikoh Nyaba, who learned how to make a health drink, branded as
Bergere, said the workshop was enriching.
She
said she had learnt how to make Bergere during one of Ecological Balance’s
training workshops in 2019, and has since then, been producing and
commercialising it.
She advised other participants to
commercialise the various products they make.
“This
training summit is better than the last one. In our last summit, we effectively
learned in two days, but during this summit, we had much time to learn how to
make different products. We even learned how to brand and package,” she said.
Ecological
Balance is an NGO that aims at raising awareness, developing commodity value
chain for non-timber agricultural products, promoting entrepreneurship for
unemployed youths, regenerating wild, native forest and promoting sustainable
menstruation.
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