“My Strength Comes from the Women”: Jenny Nuccio Changes the Lives of Women in Kenya through the Imani Collective

by | Oct 4, 2019 | Seeds: Our Blog

In 2013, sixteen Kenyan women—whom Jenny Nuccio refers to as “my women” and her “best friends”—presented Nuccio with a poorly sewn tote bag with crooked hem lines and a mismatched pattern. “It was the worst product I’d ever seen in my life,” Nuccio remembers, chuckling warmly. “But my women were absolutely glowing with pride.”

That memory—and that tote bag—hold special significance for Nuccio. It was the beginning of what would become the Imani Collective, a woman-empowerment program founded by Nuccio that provides job opportunities to single, widowed, and disadvantaged women in Mombasa, Kenya, by teaching them to sew and tailor clothing.

Nuccio’s journey to that moment was a long one. She first traveled to Kenya from her U.S. home in 2009 at 18 years old, where she worked at a school in Mtepeni, a small village on the outskirts of Mombasa. While working, she noticed many children dropping out of school because their families couldn’t afford the school fees—around $2 to $3 dollars a month. Many of these young people were the children of single mothers, farmers who could put food on the table but had no steady income. Upon that realization, Nuccio knew she had to do something. In 2013, after visiting the Mtpeni village multiple times and establishing relationships with the women there, she sold everything, bought 16 sewing machines, and moved to Kenya permanently to train women how to sew so that they could live better lives.

Her exciting venture, however, turned out to be a little more difficult than Nuccio initially thought it would be.

“When I gave my women the first pattern, they looked at me blankly; none of them knew their numbers, so they couldn’t read the measuring tape. So, I put the sewing machines aside and started teaching literacy classes.”

Those literacy and sewing classes proved to be the foundation of the Imani Collective—which has now blossomed into a thriving business that features more than 70 artisan women selling high-quality, fair-trade fashion accessories to local markets and the U.S.—by putting, always, the women first.

Nuccio puts her women first by creating for those who work at the Imani Collective a caring, holistic experience. In addition to providing monthly salaries and weekly incentives, Nuccio also provides free daily lunches, free child-care, school fee coverage, weekly empowerment workshops, and even a dream development program.

“We don’t pay by piece work,” says Nuccio. “We’ve always chosen not to do that because that puts my women on contracts instead of on a concrete foundation … the monthly salary and weekly incentives that we give them are extremely exciting and cool, and we support a culture where they—and anyone who walks into our shop!—feels loved and welcomed.”

The recipient of both a seed grant and impact grant award from TPP, Nuccio was able to grow the Collective by buying an industrial sewing machine and expanding to other parts of Kenya.
Now also a TPP Grant Advisor, Nuccio gets to put her knowledge of creating something from scratch to work in reviewing other grantees’ proposals.

No matter how far she’s come and what challenges she may face, however, Nuccio always remembers that pivotal tote-bag moment.

“For my women to go from being illiterate to drawing a straight line to creating a finished tote–I remembered their faces. They were so proud of themselves for finishing something…My strength comes from the women, and the hope they always had in their eyes.”

To support the Imani Collective:

Website: https://imanicollective.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/imanicollective
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/imanicollective/

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In the heart of Nkwen Bamenda III Sub Division, Northwest region of Cameroon, the pilot project "Youth and Visual Arts Activism for Social Change" unfolded at Teken Quarter Youth Community Hall. This initiative, running from January to April 2023, targeted fifteen disadvantaged youths—including school dropouts, drug addicts, and other vulnerable groups. The project, supported by a seed grant, was launched by the Collective Arts Development Association (CADA), which provided six art facilitators. These experts delivered extensive training in various artistic skills, from sketching and drawing on canvas boards to graphic design and T-shirt printing.

Participants were introduced to the fundamentals of colors, composition, and proportions, along with practical applications in screen printing on diverse materials like jeans, nylon, and polyester. The primary goal of the project was to leverage art and social entrepreneurship as viable alternatives to drug use, abuse, crime, and poverty in the local community. Furthermore, the project included an outreach program involving sixth-grade pupils from the Government Primary School in Teken Quarter.

The success of this pilot paved the way for a flagship initiative titled "Empowering Marginalized Youths through Life Skill Education Art and Entrepreneurship Skill Development." This ongoing program offers six-month intensive training sessions to thirty disadvantaged youths, teaching them not only visual and graphic arts but also audio-visual skills and crafts essential for economic independence and social inclusion. Moreover, the program includes mental health education, counseling, rehabilitation strategies, and connects participants with mental health professionals as needed, continuing to transform lives thanks to the foundational support of The Pollination Project grant.

#art #socialchange #activism #youthempowerment #mentalhealtheducation #cameroon #heartivism #grants #thepollinationproject
WINNERS!!
Our grantees Manjushree Abhinav and Aanchal Raturi won the Swarnali Roy Vegan Advocacy Awards 2024 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 

Manjushree received a grant for her project "My planet and my plate", inspiring students to become climate activists themselves, to plant the seed of change into the hearts and minds of students, hoping that these seeds will sprout into far-reaching effects. 

Aanchal founded Project Re-Learn, conducting workshops in Uttaranchal colleges to sensitize future agriculturists about ethical practices. 

Join us in congratulating these two incredible heartivists! 🧡 

@hsi_india 
@hsiglobal 
@manjushreeabhinav 
@earthling_anna_raturi 

#animalrights #animalwelfare #vegan #plantbased #veganlifestyle #nocruelty #crueltyfree #heartivism #grants #animaladvocacy #india
🌟 Volunteer Week 🌟  Celebrating our family of Grant Advisors!

Today we celebrate our grant advisors dedicated to #animalprotection .

🔸 April King (Montenegro/United States) 
🔸 Elphas Ongongo (Kenya) 
🔸 Mohini Sharma (India) 
🔸 Evans Okumu (Kenya) 
🔸 Fernanda García Naranjo Ortega (Mexico)
🔸 Leandro Franz (Brazil) 
🔸 Jeremy Gregory (United States)
🔸 Kate Luke (Australia)
🔸 Andrew Alexander (United States) 

@granjitatyh 
@kotorkitties 
@littleoaksanctuary 

#volunteerweek 
#animalrights  #animalwelfare  #heartivism  #grants  #animaladvocacy #advisors