‘Delicious Peace’ in Uganda

by tzaadi on May 25, 2008
in Africa, Fair Trade

Trade Not Aid

Mirembe Kawomera

Interfaith Coffee Cooperative in Uganda

By now, the phrase ‘trade not aid’ is (or should be) commonplace in our conversations. In the case of Africa, ample evidence exists to support that most financial aid from wealthier nations does not reach its poor, hungry, sick and uneducated. According to Ugandan journalist, Andrew Mwenda, between 1960 and 2003, Africa received 600 billion USD in aid, yet poverty is still widespread. Corrupt bureaucracies, war, the failure to invest in infrastructures, crushing debt and the lack of self-incentives continue to siphon aid money from the Africans who need it most. Instead of continued addiction to foreign aid and subsequent debt, what if Africans utilized more of their vast natural and human resources to empower themselves economically?

At the 2007 TED conference in California and its sibling, TED Africa 2007 in Tanzania, leading proponents of wealth creation for Africa were showcased. Along with Mwenda, economist and author (Africa Unchained) George Ayittey, pioneering Nigerian finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and others asked us here in the West to see beyond typical media portrayals of African helplessness. Instead, we should be looking to stories of self-reliance and ingenuity that show how Africans themselves are healing their continent from the inside out.

Many such success stories are surfacing across Africa. One that caught my attention is the Mirembe Kawomera Cooperative of Uganda, the best example of trade not aid I know. Mirembe Kawomera (meaning “Delicious Peace” in the Luganda language) had its beginnings in a request for neighbors to put aside old differences. In 2004, Joab Jonaday (“J.J.”) Keki, an Abayudaya coffee farmer, walked door to door asking his neighbors to come together to discuss collectively improving their lives. Previously, these fourth generation coffee farmers had struggled to survive on the low prices offered by local markets. Keki reasoned that if there were marketplaces with higher prices, every farmer could realize higher returns. Subsequently they formed Mirembe Kawomera to combine crops, refine techniques and seek new markets. Through the joint efforts of the cooperative and the fair trade Thanksgiving Coffee Company in California, the cooperative has been a success, growing to over 700 members. They have increased coffee yields and now fetch four times the former price.

They are investing profits in land and equipment, diversifying to include vanilla beans, offering microfinancing to members and contributing a fixed percentage of every sale to a variety of community public health and education projects. This new economic prosperity is only part of their success. From the beginning, they realized that theirs is a unique story. Their current, elected leadership represents each religious group within their community. The co-op president is a Jew, the vice-president, a Christian and the treasurer, a Muslim. They are all African and, in doing something together that none of them could have done alone, they have become self-reliant to build a sustainable business.

The example of Mirembe Kawomera is a blueprint for fair trade that can be applied to opportunities throughout Africa and the world. Given the current climate of class inequity, religious competition and war, a successful, African cooperative with interfaith members should be an inspiration to all of us.

Related links:

Visit the Mirembe Kawomera website for more on ‘delicious peace’. You can watch a video about the cooperative and buy their excellent coffee there.

Andrew Mwenda, Let’s Take a New Look at African Aid (video), TED 2007 Conference.

Andrew Mwenda and 3 others arrested in newspaper raid, Global Voices Online, April 28, 2008.

Comments

4 Responses to “‘Delicious Peace’ in Uganda”
  1. hash says:

    Very interesting piece. I’m of the mindset that business can help in a lot of areas, especially when people are disadvantaged and are looking for a way out. There’s nothing like strong, ongoing economic incentives to help you forget old wrongs!

  2. tzaadi says:

    thanks for your comments, Hash.

    For those of you who do not know him, Hash is Erik Hersman, blogger extraordinaire. You can follow his insights at White African. His trail of dedication and positive impacts doesn’t stop there either. He is instrumental in the very well-known projects Afrigadget and Ushahidi. His latest venture is Investing in Africa.

  3. Jenais says:

    Thanks for your coverage of this work. I am the Mirembe Kawomera Project Director for Thanksgiving Coffee Company and I appreciate you using this as a positive example of trade not aid; it is indeed a model that can be duplicated.

    At this point the Peace Kawomera Cooperative has actually grown to well over 1,000 members with more waiting to be included (this is now 2009 a year and a half after this post). Growth depends on our ability to continue building a strong market here. Our original market strategy was a person to person approach in which we intentionally targeted groups that mirrored the cooperative’s structure: faith based groups, student and community groups. We have watched demand grow as the story has spread through communities, members of the cooperative have come here on speaking tours and have met folks that drink their coffee regularly, delegations from churches and synagogues have visited the cooperative in Mbale to see where the coffee is grown and meet the farmers who take so much pride in their craft.

    This year the cooperative received a $250,000 grant from USAID to finance the construction of a central washing station as well as a new warehouse and offices. Additionally, this year we saw an improvement in coffee quality that enabled us to offer a higher price per pound that we paid to the cooperative (more money in the farmer’s pockets). This type of growth and development is what sustainability looks like from the ground up.

    Thank you for recognizing the significance of what the cooperative is doing and how it is a strong model of success in Fair Trade.

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