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Women Power

Sisters doing it for themselves in Vanuatu

- Words Kelsey-Rae Taylor. Photograph­y Artur Francisco

Rural communitie­s across the Pacific are facing huge challenges to their traditiona­l ways of life due to the increasing­ly chaotic effects of climate breakdown. With support from Oxfam and the New Zealand public, resilient rural women in Vanuatu are finding new cultivatio­n techniques to cope with crop failure from hotter, drier and more extreme weather. The world over, it’s been found that supporting the economic empowermen­t of women ultimately benefits everybody. Here are seven stories of hope and inspiratio­n.

In the eye of the storm

Extreme weather events pose relentless challenges for 36-year-old Liliany Buktan and her family. The last tropical cyclone destroyed her chook-house and killed her chickens, wiping out her main source of income. It was a serious blow to Buktan, who relies on money from her poultry and vegetables to sustain her family.

The family have vivid memories of the last devastatin­g storm. “The cyclone was very strong. Me and my kids were inside the house and the kids were crying. The wind blew off the thatch roof from the house and everything inside was wet, so we had to move and live with some [other] families. My husband lives in Vila so it was just us at the time. The cyclone was here all day and all night, and then the next day until afternoon, and then it went down.”

Despite the wreckage, Buktan decided to stay on. Through Oxfam’s local partner Farm Support Associatio­n (FSA), she is hoping to diversify into growing crops. Learning more about vegetable planting techniques that can accommodat­e the dry season, Buktan can grow more resilient crops and secure a new income for her and her family.

“At the moment with this weather, I cannot plant anything because once it goes into the ground, it dies,” she says. “The cucumbers that I have, the leaves also are dying so I could not plant anything.” With training and tools from Oxfam, Buktan is slowly gaining the resources she needs to face climate breakdown head on. “We have seen the changes. With the money I earn, I use most of it for school fees and food at home. Now we’re seeing that we make more money than before.”

Concrete advantage of pineapples

Lisy Lingi from Larvat, Malekula is the matriarch of her large extended family, and a respected leader of her village’s women’s group. With training and tools provided by FSA, Lingi has created a successful and profitable crop garden. She is using the income to improve life for her family, catapultin­g them from precarious­ness into a stable future.

The succulent, sweeter-than-sugar pineapples that she started cultivatin­g two years ago are Lingi’s pride and joy. Grown by the hundreds to sell at the local market, the spiky golden fruits have changed her life for the better. “The income I earn from pineapples is very good. It’s better than the crops I used to plant.”

One of the first things Lingi did was save up enough to build a sturdy concrete home for her extended family. She feels safer and more at ease knowing her and her family’s home is now strong enough to withstand the cyclones that occasional­ly power past their remote coastal community.

Lingi has experience­d first-hand the challenges of frequent extreme weather and hotter temperatur­es. Growing the hardy pineapple fruit provides Lingi with the sweet taste of a higher, more consistent income.

“After the cyclone last year, there was no more rain until now, so the place is very dry and the crops are not growing. The sun has been strong for very long period of time since last year until this year”, she says. “But the pineapples are growing. Because when we plant pineapples, even if there is no rain and there’s strong sun, they still grow.”

Change maker

As the sole income earner for herself, her pastor husband and three children, Bertha Harry of Larvat, Malekula started raising poultry and growing vegetables to protect her family’s future.

Traditiona­l sources of income, such as fish, taro and yam are under threat in Vanuatu from climate breakdown. Many people in rural communitie­s, like Harry, are finding new crops and animals to rely on as they adapt to their new reality.

Harry’s close-knit community has also benefited from her growing poultry trade. Recently, she used the income from her roosters and hens to help install solar lights for extra night security and visibility.

“With the sale of my first rooster I bought solar panels. So now, in this area, in all of our houses, we have solar lights on in the night,” she says.

At 49, Harry is also inspired to pass on what she learns about farming from Oxfam’s partners with others.

“I shared what I learned with people in south Malekula, and in exchange they gave money for the third round of roosters. We pooled the income and bought a truck together,” says Harry.

She often travels to her home village to teach them new techniques of planting vegetables and raising roosters, so they too can learn ways to cope with the changing environmen­t.

In the face of a future dramatical­ly different to what she knows, Harry is determined to find a way forward. And it is her resolve to bring others on her journey that is creating a ripple of change.

“Now that I have the business skills and ideas that FSA gave me, I feel that I can help others out whenever I want to. I am happy that I can help them,” she says.

Female-funded infrastruc­ture

Makin Lingi, from Larvat, Malekula, is new to the pineapple trade. Having seen her family work with Oxfam’s team to improve their planting techniques, she has seen how small changes to traditiona­l cropgrowin­g can lead to fruitful results.

Recently, an unusually long dry, hot spell presented a particular challenge, as yam and taro and other traditiona­l crops Lingi usually plants kept withering and dying.

“We plant crops, but there is not enough rainfall and the sun is too strong,” says Lingi. “There is no more rain. It’s just sunny and dry. There are rivers but they are far, so we have to travel by truck to collect water in another village.”

Pineapples are hardier than other crops and improved growing techniques usually means a higher profit margin and more consistent income throughout the year. Nonetheles­s, for the women, water is a precious commodity to sustain their crops and livelihood­s.

Part of the challenge of increased water scarcity is having a safe, clean storage method for when the rains come. So, after the last pineapple harvest, the women in the community used some of the proceeds to install a brand-new water tank, giving them a local water source for the first time in the community’s history.

“If the tank is full, the community will be very lucky because we won’t have to go get water from elsewhere,” says Lingi.

For 43-year-old Lingi this is a lifechangi­ng moment. She and the other farmers sustaining their families will no longer have to rely on expensive, faraway water sources to keep their crops alive during increasing­ly common dry periods. And it’s the first milestone of many, as Lingi and her community work together to deal with the ongoing challenges of climate breakdown.

“With the sale of my first rooster I bought solar panels. So now, in this area, in all of our houses, we have solar lights on in the night”

Bertha Harry

Sweet success

At least once a day Yvette Tahapat takes the journey to her gardens, trekking up a jungle path from her house, through the dense scrub and tumbling vines of Vanuatu’s Brenwei, Malekula.

Verdant plots with seemingly endless rows of leafy vegetables and fruit stretch out, all tended to by her and her husband. It is hard work, but rewarding.

Tahapat, 45, and her five-year-old daughter are pictured, left, in the fruit and vegetable patches that have helped put all of her children through school. The field’s abundant yields are the result of years of hard work put in by Tahapat, improving planting techniques, testing different crops and using the best tools and advice from Oxfam and its local partners.

Through good management, Tahapat makes the income go a long way. “I use some for my kids’ school fees and for myself at home. I put some away as savings, and I help other families as well – two other families of my relatives. So that’s a total of 21 people that I am supporting with the money,” she says.

Over the years of cultivatin­g her vegetable and fruit gardens, Tahapat has seen their income increase and become more consistent, so she has put it towards her children’s future. “There was a change when I joined FSA. In the past, it was hard. When my kids came to me and asked for something, I didn’t have anything to give them,” says Tahapat. “I see that now when my kids come to me asking for this or that, I have enough money put aside that I can support them with what they need.”

“I use some for my kids’ school fees and for myself at home. I put some away as savings, and I help other families as well – two other families of my relatives. So that’s a total of 21 people that I am supporting with the money” Yvette Tahapat

Winds of change

Forty-five-year-old Unes Sam of the Vanuatu island of Malekula, is skilled in the art of traditiona­l pandanus weaving. This is her main source of income – but the money she earns from selling vegetables and raising animals has been crucial to improving her family’s quality of life.

Her husband lives with a disability and is unable to work, so Sam supports him and their three children by herself. She is pictured right with her daughter, aged 10, in front of their new home.

There are frequent threats to Sam’s livelihood. Cyclones are common in Vanuatu, and Pinalum, the coastal village where she lives, has seen its fair share of devastatio­n. The flimsy thatch dwellings that most of her community live in are no match for the brutal winds of a cyclone.

This used to be reality for Sam and her family. Now she sits proudly in front of the concrete house she had built for her family, a home that would not have been possible without the extra income she has pursued. “I just opened up an account for my 16-year-old son where I can do his saving. Now when I sell animals, I put some money into his savings account as well… for his school fees.”

“It’s better than before, because

I see that I have more income when I sell the animals. Now that I have the animals, I find that there is more money if I want anything,” she says.

With support from Oxfam’s local partner FSA, Sam is continuing to develop the knowledge and resources she needs to confront the diverse challenges of climate breakdown. She says, “They help us, tell us how to care for our crops during the dry season and do composting, so that we can look after our gardens. If I have questions on how to look after my animals I ask them, and I am happy when they tell me how to do it so I can care for my animals properly. The money I received from the chickens has helped me a lot.”

For more go to oxfam.co.nz

Growing new ways

Leitamat Tavpthan and her husband together own a sizeable vegetable garden and poultry farm in the surrounds of their Brenwei, Malekula, home in rural Vanuatu.

Their long-time involvemen­t with Oxfam’s local partner, FSA, has helped them change their family’s lives for the better. Thanks to income from the gardens, Tavpthan and her husband’s four now-grown children were all able to finish school and go on to university or skilled jobs.

But the couple now face new struggles relating to extreme weather. During cyclone season, the cargo ship that brings chicken feed to the remote island where they live is often delayed, so they struggle to find alternativ­es to feed their chooks. “The weather is changing,” says 50-year-old Tavpthan. “Now when there is rain, the ground floods because the sun is so strong that the soil is very dry and hard. And now it happens every year.”

Tavpthan is passionate about helping other women to learn new techniques to cope with the changes to their traditiona­l way of life. “Last month, I raised awareness with the women in Unmet, the next village over, where I shared my experience­s as to how I plant my crops and vegetables. They’re very interested and slowly I am seeing that because of what Oxfam and FSA have done in our community, the women are coming up,” she says.

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