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Aceh
Widows Begin the Task of Rebuilding
A
bottle of lemon squash was all that remained of AisyahSabis
food stall in front of her home near the beach in the Indonesian
province of Aceh. The devastating walls of water from last Decembers
tsunami cut short Sabis efforts to become an entrepreneur
and lift her out of poverty.
Her stall and her home were completely
wiped out."So I dont know what to do now. Go home? There
is no home. Work? But I dont have anything anymore,"
Sabi says. "All I have is my uncertainty."
Two
years ago, Sabi joined PEKKA the Woman Headed Household Empowerment
Program after her husband was killed in Acehs armed
conflict. She turned to the group for help after struggling to raise
two young children on her own in a community where widows often
have few opportunities, little support and almost no voice.
It
was only a few weeks before the tsunami that Sabi received a small
loan from PEKKA to buy goods for her stall.
The PEKKA program,
which is part of the World Bank sponsored Kecamatan Development
Project in Indonesia, aims to address the needs of widows and women
living in areas of conflict by providing training and small scale
loans.Sabis story is featured in a PEKKA-produced video (link
here to video) which dramatically documents the effects of the tsunami
on the people of Aech. It shows the devastation left behind, the
rows of tents survivors now live in, and the battle to clean up
and begin again.
Now with only a
single bottle of lemon squash left, Sabi is trying to work out how
to pick up the pieces of the life she once lived.
Her answer is to
try again and set up shop but this time at her younger sisters
home. So every day, after prayers, Sabi can be seen wandering through
the rubble left after the tsunami searching for any usable wood.
The tsunami claimed
the lives of about 14 widows, who had been members of PEKKA.
While the trauma
runs deep for many, Nani Zuliminarni, the national coordinator of
PEKKA says the future is especially daunting for the surviving widows.
"There are
some villages which were totally damaged, so all the people must
be moved," she says. "Theyve lost their previous
community systems and particularly for women who are heads of households,
well, they are on their own."
Zuliminarni says
for these women, the feelings of sorrow, isolation and trauma cant
be shared, making it even harder psychologically.
With the recovery
and reconstruction effort now underway, the PEKKA program is working
to help the widows and also other community members in affected
areas.
"Our efforts
are starting from providing cash money for them, to buy daily foods
and re-start their economic activities," Zuliminarni says.
"We also plan to help them
rebuild their houses, provide scholarships for their children and
contribute in the process of building public facilities for the
affected areas."
Other members of
PEKKA in parts of the country not directly affected have also been
rallying to the cause, Zuliminarni says. For instance, some women
have invited widows from Aceh to stay with them in their own poor
homes, providing food and helping with cooking.
"The widows
groups in other provinces also help them by collecting money, cent
by cent, for their friends in Aceh," Zuliminarni says. "We
only have limited funding."
The World Bank
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