Planting Seeds of a Better Future in Rwanda

Meet the amazing women of the Kula Fellowship Program who are planting trees, learning to grow their businesses and creating a brighter future for their children — and yours.

Janet, Everest and their child (c) Kula Project

In this post, you will find a window into the life story of five special Rwandan women and their families. We promise they will be the most inspiring people you hear about today!

Planet Women is partnering with Kula Project and One Tree Planted to support five female entrepreneurs through the Kula Fellowship program. The 15-month Kula Fellowship provides coffee industry training, business investments, and life and leadership skills to empower women to build profitable businesses while stewarding the environment.

Check out the video below to hear from Peace Grace Muhizi, One Tree Planted’s project director (and a Rwandan native!), about what makes this program so special.

This program invests deeply in environmental education along with leadership-building and personal growth. Women farmers are trained by expert agronomists in tree canopy management, coffee tree and variety characteristics, soil productivity, harvesting, erosion control, weeding and waste management, composting and amendment, shade trees and more. And they are paired up with program mentors who help them all along the way. Read below to hear the individual stories of each woman!!

Vestine Mukamutesi

Vestine and her husband Boniface live in Kayonza with their six children. After noticing other families in their community having a lot of success earning income through growing coffee, Vestine became motivated to grow coffee herself. She and her husband are now new coffee farmers, starting a small farm with the 270 coffee seedlings they received last November through Kula’s partnership with One Tree Planted. They are so hopeful for what this could mean for their future.

Vestine and her daughter Naomi (c) Kula Project

Through the Kula Fellowship, Vestine plans to drastically transform the lives of her family members. Currently, she and her husband are unable to provide the funds for all of their children to go to school, so some of them are attending school while others are not. Additionally, they currently don’t have enough money to buy land in order to grow more food crops in order to feed her entire family, so they are only eating one meal per day. Because of this, Vestine dreams of earning enough income through her business to be able to pay school fees for all six of her children and buy additional land in order to provide more nutritious food to her children. She and her husband are so motivated and excited to work hard to be able to bring these dreams to life. We are so humbled and honored to walk alongside them as they do so.

Janet Mukamushumba

Janet is a 30-year-old coffee farmer in the Eastern Province of Rwanda and a new Fellow in our program. She is married to her husband, Everest, and they have two beautiful sons, Jovani and Gad. Her husband first heard that an organization called Kula was working with women in their community to support coffee farming businesses and immediately told Janet about the opportunity. Together, they decided that she would actively participate in the Kula Fellowship program. Janet told us that being loved by Everest is a blessing, and that they share all things and work to develop their home and their family together. So much so that Everest also attends all offered trainings with her because he is so excited about the program.

Janet & Everest (c) Kula Project

Janet has been farming coffee for three years, but neither she nor Everest have ever received any agronomy or coffee farming education. She is already so thankful to Kula’s agronomist in Kayonza, Felicien, for beginning to explain coffee farming best practices to her step by step, and she looks forward to not only improving her coffee farm and business, but also growing it. She also expressed how thankful she is for the support of her mentor, Assumpta, who she felt immediately connected to. Assumpta will walk alongside Janet throughout the 15-months of this program, providing personal development training as well as one-on-on support and guidance.

At the start of the Fellowship, Janet and her family worked together to discuss their vision for life after the program and set the following goals. First, they want to grow and improve their coffee business and strengthen their passion fruit and tree tomato business. Second, because agriculture businesses tend to only produce harvest and therefore income in certain seasons, they want to create an additional side business of owning and operating a shop that will produce income throughout the year. Third, they very much want their businesses to provide education for their children. They truly want both of their sons to have the opportunity to become whatever they want to become, and they believe that starts with education. Finally, Janet has her own dream of their coffee business one day being able to support her to go back to school herself. She loves mathematics and chemistry and wants to continue learning in the future.

Theodette Uwizeyimana

Theodette (c) Kula Project

Theodette is an inspiring and bubbly single mother of three children. While her life has been anything but easy, Theodette has the most indomitable spirit. Even though her husband left when her kids were young, leaving them without a home and any form of income, she has had and continues to have a strength that moves her forward. Theodette has worked extremely hard to provide a good life for her children through growing food crops and rearing goats, and now lives in one of the nicest homes in her community.

Before starting the Kula Fellowship program this year, she received 500 coffee seedlings from Kula’s partnership with One Tree Planted in November of last year, which she has planted and is currently learning the best ways to take care of in order to ensure healthy, sustainable growth. Theodette told us that Kula came in a time that she needed us most and she will work hard on her coffee farm to make us proud. So far, she has been very touched by the self-esteem training provided, and now, even though she is alone, she feels strong and confident in herself. She also expressed how happy she is to be able to spend time with other people in her community, especially after the separation of last year. She dreams of continuing to develop herself, her household, and her family to provide a beautiful life for herself and her children through her businesses.

Louise Dusengiyera

Louise is a 27-year-old coffee farmer in Kayonza, the Eastern Province of Rwanda. She and her husband, Jean Damascene, have two children, Ernest and Jean Damascene. Louise is a new coffee farmer and they currently have a coffee farm with 350 coffee trees. She told us that they grow coffee because they want to change their lives, and because of the opportunity through coffee farming, they believe their business can take them to a new phase of living.

Louise and her family (c) Kula Project

She first wanted to join the Kula program when she heard that Kula provides coffee and shade tree seedlings to those who participate in the program and she thought it would be a smart way to grow her business. Now, she is so excited for all aspects of the fellowship and is so thankful for the mentorship and training. She and her husband told us that for those who don’t have parents, like the two of them, the Kula mentors have become like parents to them.

She told us she is currently working hard to develop confidence within herself. Through self-esteem training provided by Kula mentors, she is learning that she is capable of doing anything. She is learning she is strong enough to speak in front of others and wise enough to explain what she’s feeling. Louise also told us that she’s learning how to be a good leader, one that cooperates with those she leads, one that accepts advice from others, and one that can lead her family closely and openly.

Through agronomy training, she is currently learning record keeping and is excited to create systems in her business that allow her to actually see and record what they are gaining vs. what they have lost. Louise said they used to work without a vision for the future, but now that has changed. She and her husband want their coffee business to thrive so that their children can also thrive. They believe a strong coffee business will allow them to pay school fees for their sons through university, and we look forward to watching them make that happen.

Anita Tuyishime

Anita (c) Kula Project

Anita is a young mother and brand new coffee farmer in Kayonza. She and her husband have a sweet three-year-old boy named Fabrice and are currently working together to cultivate their coffee farm of 500 coffee trees.

She told us that although the Kula Fellowship has only recently begun, she has already learned so much. Before beginning farm training, she would plant crops without knowing any of the best practices. Now, she knows how to plant properly including knowing the correct measurement of the holes, spacing between other crops, etc. She’s also learned about the importance of record keeping within her farm and business in order to monitor her farm’s success.

Her relationship with the Kula Mentors and experience with personal development training so far as been focused on self-esteem training. While having admittedly, a struggle for her, she knows it’s a journey and looks forward to gaining more and more as she continues to grow. Her vision for the future is to first develop herself so that she has the self-esteem and strength to move forward. Second, she dreams of paying school fees for her son throughout his education. And third, in addition to bettering her coffee business, she hopes to also own a shop to generate supplementary income in order to support herself and her family throughout the year.

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