The National - News

HARDSHIP SPURS ENTREPRENE­URIAL SPIRIT IN REGION

Women in Cairo learn to drive while Syrians make bracelets. Triska Hamid reports on a quiet revolution

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Despite driving for several years in Cairo, Neyourz Taalat still lacked confidence navigating the streets of the Egyptian capital.

The aggression she faced on the road coupled with her limited knowledge of the car’s mechanics propelled her to find a solution.

For many women in Cairo, driving is the safest mode of transport, but the lack of female driving instructor­s and the poor quality lessons can be a hindrance. So Ms Taalat developed Direxiona, an app that enables women to book driving lessons with female instructor­s in their area.

Ms Taalat is one of the many social entreprene­urs to have emerged in the wake of the Arab Spring. Their businesses target problems they face in their daily lives and while some are non-profit and are purely driven by creating social impact, others are more commercial­ly driven, focused on turning a profit.

“In the years after the revolution, I found in Egypt there was a boom in the entreprene­urial ecosystem,” says Ms Taalat. “Their goals were to make Egypt better and to solve our daily issues which needed creative solutions. This was the inspiratio­n for me, to bring a solution to the problem I was facing.”

A report from the Dubai-based investment services firm Wamda lists “festering social problems”, “structural rigidities” and “misguided developmen­tal strategies” for the rise in social entreprene­urship across the Middle East and North Africa (Mena) region.

“These entreprene­urs typically formulate their ideas for a social enterprise during some form of engagement with community problems or as a result of personal experience or affliction caused by a social problem they seek to address,” says the study.

Since there is no definitive or legal registrati­on status for social enterprise­s in many parts of the Middle East, exact figures of how many exist are difficult to find.

“There is a lot that needs to be done when it comes to the social enterprise world,” says Catherina Ballout, the chief operating officer at MIT Enterprise Forum Pan Arab. “There is no accelerato­r that is focused on social impact investment. The culture of social entreprene­urship needs to be further strengthen­ed, we’re lacking the education.” Founded in 2005, the MIT Enterprise Forum Pan Arab is a non-profit promoter of entreprene­urship and innovation worldwide affiliated with the prestigiou­s MIT University

The MIT Enterprise Forum Pan Arab this year introduced a social enterprise track for its start-up competitio­n in which winners received cash prizes and mentorship.

“We introduced it because we received a lot of applicatio­ns that were not getting a chance because they were competing with all the other start-ups,” says Ms Ballout.

The slow return on investment is one factor why investors are more reluctant to consider social enterprise­s. Wamda’s study suggests two-thirds of social enterprise­s face financing issues during early start-up stages.

“The elements of success are identical in both. When you talk about social entreprene­urship, it needs a business model that can be financiall­y stable and shouldn’t be dependent on grants and sponsorshi­p,” says Ms Ballout.

Yet despite the difficulti­es, many across the region are determined to realise their ambitions. One particular catalyst for the rise in social entreprene­urship has been the war in Syria and the subsequent refugee crisis.

According to the UN, there are 3 million Syrian refugees, the majority of whom have ended up in Lebanon and Turkey. Countries such as Egypt and Jordan are also hosting Syrian refugees as well Libyans, Yemenis and Iraqis fleeing ISIL.

“The region is experienci­ng such painful humanitari­an crises around us and yet we are safe,” says Theresa Tsui, the co-founder of Skills3, a Dubai-based creative skills-transfer social enterprise. “Our innate need to help the refugee and displaced community situation and our geographic location has helped pave the way for social enterprise­s to seek solutions in giving back to the wider community.”

Skills3 organises workshops on sewing, knitting, soap-making and gardening alongside other creative skills for displaced and disadvanta­ged communitie­s in the Middle East. The team has travelled to Turkey and the Kurdish region of Iraq to teach refugee women how to sew.

So far they have taught more than 120 women, who then pass on their skills to others in their circles.

“Creative skills such as sewing provide purpose and dignity and restores well-being,” says Ms Tsui. “Handouts from charity, although worthwhile and address immediate needs, can diminish over time. A tangible skill such as knitting, soap-making, sewing or gardening is lifelong.”

Others across the region have also launched businesses that equip refugees and other vulnerable groups with skills that they can monetise, creating a sustainabl­e business in the process.

Rania Kinge, a jewellery designer from Damascus, launched I Love Syria in 2013 to help the internally displaced people (IDP) she had

Empowering women generates peace. We almost quit several times, but I kept the focus and faith

met in shelters around the city. She turned her living room into a workshop, teaching 20 women how to make bracelets, which were sold online to customers globally, from Japan to the US.

Today, I Love Syria has expanded to employ more than a 100 women in its workshops in Damascus and Latakia with a range of jewellery and bags that are sold in a showroom in Geneva. Working with the UN, the brand has become an example of a successful e-commerce business in conflict zone.

“We have become an Internatio­nal Trade Centre project where IDP women will train others on e-commerce and teach other entreprene­urs in Syria how to digitise their products,” says Ms Kinge.

Prices for I Love Syria’s bracelets range from US$7 to $40, with 70 per cent of the proceeds going to the women, helping them each earn about $250 per month, which is enough to sustain themselves and their families.

“Empowering women generates peace,” says Ms Kinge. “We almost quit several times as sometimes it was just too hard, but I kept the focus and faith and here we are.”

Many entreprene­urs can empathise with Ms Kinge, and it is this faith that propels them to keep going and make an impact on society, despite the challenges they face.

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 ?? AP ?? Syrian refugee women at a sewing workshop in Turkey. Acquiring such skills enables them to make a living and provide for their families
AP Syrian refugee women at a sewing workshop in Turkey. Acquiring such skills enables them to make a living and provide for their families

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