Over generations, the countryside here has shifted in quiet but steady ways. Land once shared and tended to by a community cooperative has been subdivided and transferred to families. Rivers that once rose to meet bridges now trickle through the landscape. And women, who were once unable to participate in community spaces and share their voices, now meet routinely as students and teachers, entrepreneurs and leaders. Today, the organization is theirs. They decide, and they lead.
Ermelinda Chacha, 52, has experienced the region’s evolving nature.