Before joining this cooperative in Chad, 54-year-old Marceline rented land to farm peanuts and relied on luck for the harvest. Through support from CARE and local partners, the group learned how to plant, irrigate, and harvest more effectively—but more importantly, they created a supportive space to save and plan together.
Now, their cooperative acts as both a business and a savings group. Within two years they bought their own shared land to farm, reducing their costs by pooling resources. Their earnings go toward food, clothes, school fees for their children, and investing in improvements such as processing machines so they can sell their produce for more.
Marceline says the work has changed everything, including household dynamics. “Before, husbands handled everything outside the home.” These days, the women and their husbands are partners. They farm together, cook together, care for their children together, and plan together.
The savings group intends to buy more land and cows for plowing. “We help each other and have become a family,” Marceline says of the group. “It’s better to work together than working alone.”
How savings groups help feed communities