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Story and Perspective

Pathways – Fall 2023: Building Climate Resilience

Sarah Peck

South Asia + MENA Pakistan Tanzania
Tabinda Sarosh, President, South Asia, Middle East, and North Africa

Jump to: Letter from Tabinda Sarosh | In Tanzania, economic empowerment and climate change resilience go hand-in-hand |Video – Empowering Their Communities Through Climate Action| Champions of Change – Pakistan | Ainee’s Impact – Dharti Ammar | Pathways Full PDF Publication


Letter from
Tabinda Sarosh

DEAR PATHFINDERS,

Last month, the U.S. government released its first strategy responding to the effects of climate change on women. In Pakistan, the country’s first-ever National Adaptation Plan was approved by the federal cabinet to enhance the nation’s resilience against adverse impacts of climate change. Next month, the 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP28) will convene to discuss the biggest challenges facing the global community, working to build a roadmap that leaves no one behind as we invest in climate change mitigation and adaptation.

At Pathfinder, we have been working on the frontlines of climate change for years. Over the past few, we have recognized the importance of having our approach to climate resilience consider the impacts of climate change on gender, understanding that women and girls suffer disproportionately, yet continue to be underrepresented in developing policies and solutions to address the climate crisis. We know that climate change leads to denial of sexual and reproductive health services and rights, increases food and water insecurity, impacts livelihoods and economic security, and worsens existing inequities— in every country where Pathfinder works.

Climate change interrupts health service delivery and increases health risks, particularly among already climate-vulnerable communities. The 2022 floods in Pakistan led to health facilities being destroyed, and health services unable to reach those that needed immediate care and services; at that time the UNFPA had estimated close to 650,000 pregnant women in the flood affected areas would be without maternal health care services.

At Pathfinder, we are strengthening the capacity of health systems to be resilient in the face of climate shocks, while supporting communities to develop local, contextually relevant solutions that enable them to adapt to these shocks. Our work reflects our vision of seeing locally led development and local leadership at the heart of climate change solutions and strengthening the nexus between gender equality and climate change solutions. Pathfinder’s climate resilience work recognizes that investments in women generate durable improvements to health outcomes, help ensure sustainability of essential services and programs, and ultimately lead to communities that are more equitable, healthy, and sustainable. Pathfinder’s approach encompasses the following:

Through our integrated approach, we take care to avoid shifting the burden of developing climate solutions onto women. To ensure we are responding to the greatest challenges faced by women, our programs incorporate women’s economic empowerment, the prevention and response to gender-based violence related to climate impacts, and advocacy and awareness campaigns that include a mix of health and climate messaging.

In this issue of Pathways, you will read about women in Pakistan and Tanzania who are leading the charge to protect their families and communities from climate shocks.

They are powerful, and I am proud to walk beside them as they work to build resilience, and a better future, in the communities where they live.

Yours,
Tabinda Sarosh
President, South Asia, Middle East and North Africa

In Tanzania, economic empowerment and climate change resilience go hand-in-hand

“This is a wooden fence that we’ve put around the house to protect the goats from being eaten by wild animals.”

In Felister Gidion’s community, this is a reality— hyenas, lions, leopards, and other predators are real day-to-day threats to her livelihood. But Felister’s fence, as well as the installation of “living walls” in communities like hers, mean safer livestock and, ultimately, better livelihoods.

Felister is part of USAID’s MOMENTUM Integrated Health Resilience, which works in the Greater Mahale Ecosystem (GME), the Northern Tanzania Rangelands (NTR), and the Ruaha Rungwa Ecosystem (RRE), areas where extreme poverty, climate change, and geographic isolation threaten people’s health and environment. The project implements an integrated approach with partners—The Nature Conservancy, the Southern Tanzania Elephant Programme, and the Government of Tanzania—and strengthens health resilience, allowing communities to carry on health activities in the face of shocks and stressors.

What’s a living wall?
In addition to the inner ring of acacia thorns, living walls are built by using native trees that act as fence posts, which are then covered with chain-link fencing that makes it impossible for predators to squeeze through. Living walls also serve the purpose of separating animals and their caretakers— previously, some Maasai people lived with their animals in the same spaces.

Model Bomas

Felister lives in a “model boma,” a household that has volunteered to model positive health and environmental practices, including building handwashing stations (tippy taps), using energy-saving stoves, upgrading latrines, using climate-smart agriculture, practicing positive sexual and reproductive health and rights attitudes and behaviors, and ensuring boys and girls go to school. Through the project, 70% of households in the Northern Tanzania Rangelands have access to upgraded latrines, and 84% of community members have improved water sources through public taps and piped water. The project aims for 75% of households to be enrolled in the model household program.

To promote the adoption of positive health and environmental behaviors among households and the community at large, the project supports community health workers (CHWs) and community champions with stipends and trainings. These champions and CHWs then conduct household and village visits to promote healthy behaviors, including use of latrines, bath shelters, long-lasting insecticidal mosquito nets, and climate-smart agriculture and food security practices. The champions and CHWs also promote the adoption of positive attitudes toward voluntary family planning and respectful, inclusive decision making between women and men. In the project’s second year, 142 champions have reached 97,569 community members with integrated family planning, health, and conservation messages.

School Clubs for the Next Generation

Partnerships with schools and local education departments have resulted in the formation of school clubs that provide students with reproductive health and environmental conservation education as well as hands-on activities such as tree planting.

For Aidan Nyigo, a teacher at Naitolia primary school, the club has been invaluable for his students. “Our club has 50 club members, 26 girls and 24 boys,” says Aidan. “The club participates in different activities, including planting trees, environ-mental conservation learning, general environmental and bodily hygiene, and reproductive health and family planning education.” In addition, all of the young club members receive education on gender-based violence and violence against children.

Economic Independence

While community conservation and health education and services are critical, livelihoods are also integral to thriving communities. MOMENTUM supports communities to develop savings and loans groups for women and men. These groups support members to diversify their incomes through environmentally friendly businesses such as beekeeping and soap making, provide information on sustainable natural resource management practices, and members are linked with information about sexual and reproductive health and maternal and child health services. Currently, 4,074 people are members of community conservation microfinance groups; 2,877 are women.

In Nafco Village, for example, the project is supporting a Maasai Women’s lead Community Conservation Microfinance Group with more than 30 members and a shared value of more than 4 million Tanzanian shillings (roughly $1,600).

“This group is composed of members who conduct agriculture and livestock activities,” says Neema Sirya, who leads the group in Nafco Village. “The group has members who are widowed and depend on agriculture and livestock [for their livelihoods].” Through the group’s work, the women have received financial support for health needs, education, and environmental adaptations. In the last year, not a single loan default was reported.

Maasai Women: Empowering Their Communities Through Climate Action

What’s next for the project? Ramping up work with community health workers and local champions to enroll more model bomas, and increasing the number of savings and loan groups, while establishing greater access to health services for members.

Champions of Change

Meet the women who are leading the charge in building climate resilience —and gender equity— in their communities

It’s a phrase we’ve heard for years—think globally, act locally. But for Ainee Kohli, acting locally isn’t a catchphrase—it’s her life. An activist and educator in her community, Ainee has brought women in Parodahro Taluka, Pakistan, together and strengthened their knowledge and skills in climate adaptation, disaster risk reduction, and sexual and reproductive health and rights. Ainee and her husband, Dalpat, are working on everything from recycling water projects to educating young girls… and they are just getting started.

“I am originally from Mirpurkhas,” says Ainee, “and I moved to Tharparkar after marriage. Despite all the challenges of living in Tharparkar, I chose to stay here and make a difference for other women and girls living here.”

Tharparkar, Pakistan, is in Sindh province, a region where climate change is decreasing access to food and water, and negatively impacting health, agriculture, and livelihoods. In the previous 20 years, rainfall patterns have shifted dramatically, shrinking the monsoon season and increasing drought.

But Ainee and the women in her community are making a difference. As climate champions, they worked with Pathfinder’s project I am Resilient, I am Change, (known locally as Dharti Ammar), which has strengthened resilience to climate change and disasters in farming communities of Tharparkar district, Pakistan, through the leadership and engagement of women and girls.

The project worked to transform harmful gender norms and attitudes that perpetuate violence against women. At the same time, it engaged men and boys, community-based organizations, policymakers, and university students to enhance collaboration between climate change, health, and women’s rights advocacy groups.

Community members attended trainings and conversations on a range of issues, including climate-adaptive farming solutions; water, sanitation, and hygiene practices; sexual and reproductive health; and gender equity. In addition, the project collaborated with policy makers, helping them understand the links between climate change and sexual and reproductive health and rights. Finally, the project worked with local educational institutions, focusing on advocacy and dialogues on climate change, gender, and health.

Moomal speaks to a group of young girls on sexual and reproductive health and rights.
Moomal speaks to a group of young girls on sexual and reproductive health and rights.

Moomal, one of the women reached through the project, is now an active advocate. She held sessions on climate-adaptive farming practices and sexual and reproductive health and rights with young women in her community.

“I have created a space in my house where women from my village gather to engage in discussions and seek guidance,” she says. “These get-togethers are transformative, as women discuss the challenging prevailing myths and stigmas surrounding their lives and roles. With each session, the barriers are gradually eroded, empowering these women to break free from societal constraints and embrace new possibilities for their personal and collective growth.”

Moomal and Moolchand.
Moomal and Moolchand with their family.

Moomal’s husband, Moolchand, is right there beside her. “I believe in providing equal opportunities to both boys and girls for their educations and to pursue their dreams,” he says. “I wholeheartedly support the importance of education for all. I want my daughter to grow into a strong and independent woman.”

Water — reuse, recycle!

In Ainee’s community, only two wells for drinking water exist. During the summer, the wells run dry. That means villagers walk between 20 to 30 kilometers to get drinking water. During the rainy season, a small pond serves as a second outlet for water, but as the climate shifts, a critical factor in everyone’s daily life is where, and how, to get water.

Dharti Ammar focused on recycling water to minimize the reliance on external water sources and develop an agricultural ecosystem. This has helped the community reuse a precious resource and support the growth of crops in this arid land.

Dalpat and Ainee at an area that allows them to use, and reuse, water. Water filters in the back of the platform, feeding plants behind the wall.

Says Dalpat, Ainee’s husband, “Our top priority has been recycling water. We are now able to use it for ourselves and get that water to our crops and other plantation areas. We are developing more effective systems to optimize the use of water for ourselves and also for our crops. These plants wouldn’t survive otherwise.”

With more available water comes two other things: more crops and more time. For the women of the community, they know exactly what to do with both! Mani Bai is one of these women, and she is working hard to grow more resilient crops despite the shifting climate. “These trainings and information are crucial to our lives,” says Mani, “because they enable us to produce a successful harvest. I can now gather fruits and vegetables, shield them from different temperature fluctuations, and feed my family.”

Mani Bai. Photo: Ali Rivzi

Mani isn’t the only one who is improving her harvest. Mukesh, Tai, and Ajoti, members of the next generation, have also gotten into it! Says Tai, “We enjoy watching plants grow and take pride in contributing our efforts to the environment’s well-being.” And Ajoti has more to say. “I love learning about growing fruits and vegetables! Gardening is super fun, especially when we get to see the plants grow from tiny seeds into big plants. We even help our parents in the garden, watering the plants and taking care of them. It feels amazing to grow our own food and knowing that we are helping our family and the environment.”

Resilience means empowerment

Better harvests, more water access, and working alongside men and boys means something else for women: more time for pursuing livelihoods. “Water conservation and recycling techniques that we’ve learned in the trainings have given us more free time,” says Dhani. “The number of trips to fetch water from the well has been reduced. I now have more time at my disposal to make ‘rallis’ (patchwork quilts) and other items.”

Dharti Ammar provided training to 100 farming families on the impact of climate change on sexual and reproductive health and climate-smart agriculture. These families then conducted trickle down sessions, reaching 200 farming families. In total, they reached out to approximately 6,390 community members, including women, girls, men, and boys.

Learn more about Pathfinder’s climate resilience work.

Jump to: Letter from Tabinda Sarosh | In Tanzania, economic empowerment and climate change resilience go hand-in-hand |Video – Empowering Their Communities Through Climate Action| Champions of Change – Pakistan | Ainee’s Impact – Dharti Ammar | Pathways Full PDF Publication

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