Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How entrepreneurship transforms a village
How entrepreneurship transforms a village
Dec 22, 2024 2:46 AM

As we were walking down the street of a small village within Barahona in the Dominican Republic, we met a woman living in a humble home with her family. She had constructed a metal box out of scraps found discarded near her village, Algodon. On top of the box, she had a fire burning, and inside there was a large pan of yucca bread baking. It smelled delicious.

This is precisely the type of person that the Acton Institute Poverty Initiative understands to be the hope of munity. Taking the little she had to construct an innovative oven, she now bakes bread and sells it to earn a living that can support her family. She is an entrepreneur.

I tasted a bit of her plimented her on how incredible it tasted, and she lit up. I could see that she takes so much pride in the work she does. This bread is the work of her hands, and to see people enjoying what she has produced gives her a purpose in her work. Several of us purchased loaves of bread, and she was so grateful, not because we had taken pity on her, but because we affirmed her dignity and creative capacity. She provided us with a good and earned an honest wage for doing so.

Her work stretches beyond our minor interaction, of course. She contributes to the micro-economic system within her village. She sells bread so that she can purchase rice from a local farmer and clothes from a neighbor. In doing so, munity es increasingly self-sustaining, less dependent on donations and government assistance. Complete independence won’t happen overnight, but it is the goal, and munity is working toward it each and every day.

Children of the Nations (COTN) is one of our PovertyCure partner organizations and they are present in munity. They help establish schools and health clinics that allow munity to grow by “raising children who transform nations.” The goal of this organization is not to take root here, but to instead establish a base that will allow munity to flourish, which will allow COTN to be less and less present. As people in munity continue to work — including the woman I met — munity will e more and more self-reliant and COTN will no longer have to be as involved.

The people of Algodon are already transforming munity. After the children grow up and go on to higher education, they return to the village. Some have e doctors and are ing back to work within their own home munity.

Others, like the woman I met, wish to lead their children by example and empower them with education and opportunity. She wants to be invested in their future and the future of Algodon, and she has the gifts to make it possible.

Image: Algodon, Children of the Nations (permission)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Women of Liberty: Abigail Adams
(March is Women’s History Month. Acton will be highlighting a number of women who have contributed significantly to the issue of liberty during this month.) In today’s era of texting, Facebooking and emails, one wonders fortable our nation’s second First Lady would have felt about these forms munication. Abigail Smith Adams, while not a “woman of letters” (she had little formal education), left behind letters that tell us much about her, her marriage and her desire to be part of...
Video: Rev. Sirico on the Papal Conclave
KNOP-TV featured a report earlier this week in which it interviewed Acton president and co-founder, Rev. Robert Sirico describing the tough decision the Cardinals faced when choosing a new pope. ...
Audio: First reactions to Pope Francis on ‘Al Kresta in the Afternoon’
Director of the Istituto Acton in Rome, Kishore Jayabalan, and Acton Director of Research, Samuel Gregg, were recently featured on Ave Maria’s Al Kresta in the Afternoon to discuss the selection of Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Buenos Aires as Pope Francis. Jayabalan was in St. Peter’s Square for the announcement and he says that the mood in Rome was quite different than it was in 2005. Despite the thousands of people in the square, it was very quiet; most people...
Samuel Gregg: Is Pope Francis a Man of the Left?
Pope Francis At National Review Online, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg talks about the “profound illustration of the limits of applying secular political categories to something like the Catholic Church.” He goes on to discuss the “particular concerns” that Pope Francis has regarding economic issues, including materialism and consumerism, and the poor, all reflected through his life of asceticism. Gregg then places these reflections in the context of modern day Argentina. More: Over the centuries … Catholics have actually disagreed...
Rod Dreher on Community, Calling, and Life with Limits
In his ing book, author and journalist Rod Dreher chronicles his journey back to his hometown of St. Francisville, Louisiana, in “the wake of his younger sister Ruthie’s death.” After spending time in St. Francisville during the final months of his sister’s life, Dreher, who left his hometown as a teenager and bounced around from city to city in the years proceeding, was struck by the support and generosity his sister received from munity. In a column written shortly after...
New Building for a New Era at Acton
Earlier this month the Acton Institute moved to its new home in downtown Grand Rapids, Mich. David Urban of The Rapidian has an update on the transition: The 38,000 square foot building features a multi-functional, high-tech conference center and auditorium that can hold events for more than 200 people, a media center, several libraries, and office space for the institute’s staff. The institute will occupy the basement and first floor of the building. Acton employees have expressed excitement about how...
Pope Francis ‘provides Catholics with fresh guidance’
Yesterday, Cardinals choose Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina to be the new pope. A The Detroit News editorial points out that “[t]hirty-nine percent of the world’s Catholics live in Latin America, making this pope a fitting choice for many Catholics.” Countries with the largest number of Catholics include Brazil, Mexico, the Philippines and U.S. One hundred years ago, that landscape was shifted toward Europe, with France and Italy housing the greatest number. The Detroit News asked Acton Research Fellow Michael Miller...
5 TV Shows That Demonstrate the Importance of Ordinary Work
Television is often lamented for its propensity to exaggerate the mundane and the ordinary. Yet when es to something as routinely downplayed and unfairly pooh-poohed as our daily work—the “rat race,” the “grindstone,” yadda-yadda—I wonder if television’s over-the-top tendencies might be just what we need to reorient our thinking about the broader significance of our work. As I’ve argued previously, we face a constant temptation to limit our economic endeavors to the temporal and the material, focusing only on “putting...
Commentary: A Passion for Government Leads to Neglect of Our Neighbor
When government provision is expected in all areas of life we begin to neglect our personal obligations to our families and neighbors, says Dylan Pahman, assistant editor of the Journal of Markets & Morality. “For the ancient Jews, intergenerational relations were a religious matter,” says Pahman. mand ‘honor your father and mother’ (cf. Exodus 20:12) served as a bridge between duties to God and duties to neighbors. Our situation today may be quite different than that faced by Jews in...
Video: Kishore Jayabalan discusses Pope Francis on France 24
Kishore Jayabalan, Director of Instituto Acton in Rome, Italy, joined France 24 News today to discuss the pontificate of Pope Francis I as he assumes his new office of leadership. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved