International Women’s Day Celebrations in Mbale District.

Push Community Initiative participated in the International Women's Day Celebrations held in Mbale District on 12th April,2023 at Jewa Town Council Headquarters. Under the theme,embracing equity, PCI adolescent girls and young women made presentations using puppet theatre and exhibition of their work on making reusable sanitary pads and tailoring.
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Mariam’s change story

  Background: Kabuya Mariam, female, aged 23 years , dropped out of school in senior four due to life challenges. She is a  young mother of  01 and comes from Jewa Lower cell in Jewa Town Council, Mbale District. Mariam is the last born  among the 14 children of mzee Nabudo Yahaya Masaba of Jewa Parish,in Mbale. Intervention: In 2020,PCI received funding from the RightsNowFoundation to implement the Skills for Education(S4E) project in Mbale to empower vulnerable girls with sustainable income generating skills. Mariam is one of the over 200 adolescent girls and young women(AGYW) who benefited from the PCI skills for education (S4E) project funded by the RightsNow Foundation in 2020. Asked how she learned about [PCI ] and how she got involved in the S4E project, Mariam says” I learnt about PCI through a friend. My friend told me that PCI had enrolled girls during the COVID-19 lock down and was training them in skills like making sanitary pads and tailoring. I asked her whether the project was free of charge and whether I could also join. She told me the project was free and PCI was enrolling vulnerable girls like me. The following day I joined and started learning how to make handmade reusable sanitary pads. After 2 days I tried the sewing machine and I felt good. This made me to love the project and continue participating’. Mariam under went a six months hands on artisan training on tailoring and she graduated in 2021. She now operates her business from Busia( Kayola yard) and  earns on average UGX 36,000= ( USD 10) per day. About the changes that Mariam has experienced as a result of participating in PCI projects /trainings: Mariam is happy to express: “ There are very many changes. First I  no longer have time to waste. Every day I wake up, I know what I have to do. I am self-employed. I can survive as an individual because I am working and I do not depend on any one for survival as it was before. Secondly, I was  shy and timid. My self- esteem was low but now I can confidently address up to five people without fear. People no longer despise me, because I work, I hope to have even  a better future”, She expressed with smiles. Mariam describes the changes that she has seen and heard of in her community as a result of PCI and RightsNow Foundation project as follows: “ I see children and girls engaged in tailoring training which occupy them during school holidays and weekends. When holidays come, they go to PCI skills center to attend training in tailoring and making reusable sanitary pads. I see many girls and young women  admire me and they want to be like me. I have seen AGYW have gained confidence. Girls no longer engage in bad behavior like asking boys for money to buy sanitary pads. I have seen some girls who get old clothes, go to PCI skills center and make their own pads. This has  reduced early pregnancy.” Mariam’s message to other girls who could be suffering is that: They (girls) should know that they can also manage and succeed like me. “First, they(AGYW) should believe in themselves. Say , I am Mariam and I can do it. Be confident. They should  have hope because situations change. I never knew I could join an organization like PCI, get skills and become independent. The AGYW should know that a skill is permanent and can give you a job all the time. They should be engaged, go to PCI and gain skills. Girls planning to get married should know that if you get married with a skill in your head, you can make a better wife and mother”, summarized Mariam. Mariam is grateful to the RightsNow Foundation and all PCI development partners including PEPFAR and PACE for supporting adolescent girls and young women in Uganda.
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PCI CALL FOR ACTION TO SUPPORT ADOLESCENT GIRLS AND YOUNG WOMEN.

PUSH COMMUNITY INITIATIVE (PCI) FUNDING APPEAL,2023.

CALL FOR ACTION TO SUPPORT ADOLESCENT GIRLS AND YOUNG WOMEN TO COME OUT OF VULNERABILITY.

The  problem we seek to address:

HIV/AIDS services for adolescent girls and young women are still limited, menstrual hygiene needs for adolescent girls and young women are ignored, poverty is still biting and vulnerable families cannot fend for the members in their households and negative coping mechanisms like Child survival sex ,drug abuse and domestic violence are on the increase in the program areas. Adolescent girls and young women are at a big risk of absorbing the negative effects of child abuse, HIV/AIDS ,gender-based violence and household poverty due to their high vulnerability. In the program area , adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) find themselves with “sugar daddies” and other intimate partners who lure them into unprotected sex in exchange for small gifts including food, and sanitary pads thus exposing them to HIV/AIDS and lifelong problems like unwanted children.

Our appeal:

PCI  seeks financial support  of $50000 from concerned individuals and agencies both profit and nonprofit to intervene in the area of HIV/AIDS prevention and care, skills empowerment for beneficiaries and  poverty reduction  in order to promote and advance the rights of 200 vulnerable children, adolescent girls and young women in Mbale District of eastern Uganda.

Justification for the appeal:

Studies have found adolescence to be characterized by dramatic physical, psychological and social changes that are often not well understood by adults yet, adolescents lack skills to cope with these changes. Adolescent girls and young women in Bufumbo  and Jewa Town Council in Mbale District are vulnerable:  they highly depend on adults, peers and spouses for life choices, health education and basic needs. Their inexperience and lack of positive guidance exposes them to high risks of contracting HIV, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) human trafficking  and general abuse.

Who we are:

PCI is a child focused Uganda indigenous organization driven by the vision, “An empowered Community Safe for Children “and the Mission “To protect children from all forms of abuse through interventions that overcome poverty, ignorance, disease and social injustice. The organization is guided by her core values of: compassion and love for children, time management, professionalism and accountability. We are  registered by the Uganda NGO Bureau under Reg No.5101 we operate in Mbale District  with head office in Jinja City, Eastern Uganda.   PCI is a partner of choice for stakeholders having a passion for vulnerable children and adolescent girls in rural Uganda. Formed in 2019, PCI’s general objective is saving lives, reducing suffering, promoting human dignity, creating hope and increasing resilience of vulnerable children. PCI is opposed to child rights deprivation, gender-based violence, HIV/AIDS, poor adolescence and reproductive health and general community suffering. The organization’s work is centered on four thematic areas: education, health, livelihoods and child protection.

Our Competence:

Since 2019, PCI has directly supported over 200 adolescent girls and young women (10-24) in the rural subcounties of Jewa and Bufumbo in Mbale District of Eastern Uganda. The beneficiaries have been supported through offering tailoring skills and  making of reusable sanitary pads for menstrual hygiene management at the PCI’s skills center in Bufumbo.   Our six months artisanal tailoring skills program has increased economic empowerment among AGYW in the program area. With support from the PEPFAR small grant fund and the American Embassy in Uganda we have implemented The Skills for HIV Mitigation and Prevention (SHIMP) project which has supported AGYW to benefit from more tailoring skills, HIV/AIDs awareness and life skills. We have adapted the certified training manuals from PEPFAR such as the Steppingstones and Journeys Plus suitable for engaging adolescent girls and young women. Besides we have an innovation of employing puppetry as a form of mass mobilization and awareness raising on community issues including HIV/AIDS and ASRH. Puppetry is a form of theatre that involves the manipulation of puppets – inanimate objects, often resembling some type of human or animal figure, which are animated or manipulated by a human called a puppeteer. We employ puppetry skills to mobilize, inform and educate  community members in  trading centers, schools and churches on key development concerns.

Our Strategic Principle:

“Here for Children”. We are a child centered organization. We believe that well nurtured, empowered and skilled children are the answer to poverty, global peace and development. We are convinced that by supporting adolescent girls and young women(AGYW), we will create opportunities for children under their care to thrive and achieve their potential. We also believe that the world out there is still concerned and compassionate about children and is will to stand with PCI in this cause.

Contact us on:

Pushcommunityp@gmail.com/info@pushcommunityinitiative.org Tel +256 772 888331. Website: www.pushcommunityiniative.org
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Empowering Rural women with self employment skills

The Global COVID-19 pandemic has left many households socially and economically devastated. Push Community Initiative has however provided some hope to rural women in Bufumbo Sub-county in Mbale through tailoring skills. We call upon stakeholders to support us reach more vulnerable women in the rural community of Uganda because they are not only mothers of the nation but the first line of response to family challenges.

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IN PURSUIT TO SAVE LIVES,RESTORE HOPE AND DIGNITY

Kainza Jane 52 years is a mother of 9 children who has lived with chronic illness for 12 years now. Jane has high blood pressure,stroke and painful ulcers.For over 12 years now Jane has not found treatment for her sickness not even support equipment like wheel chair to enable her move out of her room. Her daughters have to take care of her including bathing and supporting her to turn in bed.Her children dropped out of school, relatives, neighbours and friends have deserted her.Jane needs a wheel chair, treatment and basic needs. She wants to see her children go back to school.

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COVID-19 & Child Labour

Children in many parts of rural Uganda are engaged in child labour due to closure of schools. In Bukabalenda village Kitagulu Ward in Bufumbo Subcounty,Mbale District i found many children engaged in sugar cane cutting as early as 8amwhereas their counterparts in towns attend classes on TV and Radio at such a time.

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