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Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary
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Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary

Ugandan Stretch Bracelet: Colors Vary

Availability: In stock

Item #: 102382

Regular price $8.00 Sale price

Compare at $12.00

We currently have 2 in stock.

Paper bead stretch bracelet. Comes in various colors.

One-of-a-kind handmade paper bead bracelets come in a variety of colors, reflecting the uniqueness of the vibrant women who create them.

Please place your color preference in the gift comments section of the order form, and we will do our best to match the request. Made in Uganda.

 

Where this product came from

Uganda Women's Enterprises

The HIV epidemic has taken its toll on Uganda, causing tens of thousands of AIDS-related deaths each year. Those left behind often struggle to survive: widows suffering from HIV, newly single mothers with no job skills or education, and orphaned teens trying to provide for their siblings. Longing to bring healing and wholeness to their community, two entrepreneurial women created a business to employ their fellow widows. Within a few years, nearly eighty women were gathering daily to study, enjoy fellowship, and craft jewelry from beads made out of recycled magazine pages. With a new sense of emotional and financial empowerment, these widows soon began caring for orphans in their own neighborhoods, expanding their circles of protection to the “least of these” in their community.

As the program grew to serve more families, its founders sought ways to create more jobs. Discovering a rising market for jewelry and buttons made from cow horns, they conceived of a co-op that would employ not just widows but their family members and older orphans as well. With assistance from WAR, Int’l, the new workshop became a reality. Together, the magazine bead and cow horn enterprises continue to provide stability and sustainability for this now-thriving community.