Nicaragua CEPAD
For the next five years we are partnering with CEPAD to empower seven communities in Teustepe, Nicaragua with the skills, knowledge and community resilience required to address their own problems.
Your gift will enable communities in Nicaragua to adapt their farming, land use and water conservation techniques to the changing climate. It will give them the skills to become more resilient and productive. Your support will empower people like Rosa to change their lives and their communities.
Nicaragua is one of the countries most affected by climate change. While the world is talking about the need for drastic action, the people of Nicaragua have been living with its escalating consequences for decades.
For the next five years, Amos Trust will be investing in seven new rural communities. Our partner CEPAD will develop local leadership, empower women and support farmers to adapt to the changing climate. Families and communities will become more resilient, more productive and be able to claim rights they never knew existed.
Give & Grow
When you make a donation, you will be offered the chance to receive some real seeds, and a reflection, so you can grow plants in solidarity with these communities.
Our Approach
Our long-term partner CEPAD has a tried and tested five-year model that responds to this in a holistic and sustainable way. Local experts teach farmers how to adapt their land to cope with the changing climates — how to conserve water, create organic fertilisers and choose the most appropriate crops.
Women learn how to cultivate the land around their houses, improve soil quality and conserve water. They are encouraged to plant a wide range of fruit and vegetables, broadening their family diet. As their yields increase, they learn how to develop a micro-business to sell the surplus.
At the same time, community leaders are taught to listen to their community, identify needs and encourage participation. They learn about their rights and how to lobby effectively to see real change such as roads, toilets, bridges and connecting bus services.
At the heart of the model is sustainability. Community leaders, farmers and women are selected to be ‘pioneers’. As their skills and confidence increase, they pass on their learning (and seeds) to others so that even after the five-year programme ends, more and more people can benefit.
Rosa’s Story
Rosa stands in her garden, proudly holding a large plastic jar filled with bright yellow corn. “This is next year’s seed,” she says. Rosa is one of the pioneers from our last five-year programme. She learnt how to cultivate the small plot of land around her home. Her family’s diet now includes fruit and vegetables (not just beans and rice), and she has set up her own seasonal micro-business.
Rosa now shares what she has learnt, and her spare seeds, with the rest of her community and campaigns for their rights. As a result of her determination, a new road has been built; there are toilets, water purifiers, vibrant gardens and even a bus service. Rosa can’t believe what she’s managed to achieve: “In five years we have made all this happen. Imagine where we will be five years from now!”
How much does it cost?
— £25 will provide a woman with seeds, cuttings and training in cultivation so her family can have food security and a healthier diet.
— £80 will provide seed for one farmer to diversify and plant crops better able to withstand the impact of climate change.
— £150 will pay for the materials for one micro dam; water conservation has become essential as long droughts are followed by intense rain and flooding.
Thank you for supporting our new campaign
Your gift will enable communities in Nicaragua to adapt their farming, land use and water conservation techniques to the changing climate. It will give them the skills to become more resilient and productive. Your support will empower women like Rosa to change their lives and their communities for good.
Take a look through our range of resources, including blog posts, downloads and products, to find out more about our Climate Justice work.
With Dámaris Albuquerque, Jocelyn Timperley, Molly Elliot and Richard Elliot. We heard the latest news from Dámaris from CEPAD on the impact of Coronavirus in Nicaragua and had a conversation with Jocelyn Timperley from DeSmog UK, youth climate activist Molly Elliot and Pickwell Foundation’s Richard Elliot on how we can emerge from the current situation with a far stronger call for climate justice.
For our 33rd and final webinar of Amos@6 Season 4, we took the opportunity to celebrate our planet and to amplify the call for radical action to address climate change and to call for climate justice. Spoken word artist Zena Kazeme performed some of her own work as well as hosting a range of other performers and activists. Zena Kazeme is a Persian-Iraqi poet and author who draws on her experiences as a former refugee to create poetry that explores themes of exile, home, war and heritage.
When last year’s COP (UN Climate Change Conference) was delayed by 12 months, young people from around the world called their own ‘Mock COP’. Delegates from 140 countries put together and voted through their own treaty with 18 policies/demands for COP 26. For our own COP 26 webinar, we were delighted to host a group of young climate activists from the UK and Nicaragua who were drawn together by our partner CEPAD.
Alexandra Wanjiku Kelbert from Ithaca College and Warwick University discusses how our calls for climate justice will only make progress when we recognise its inter-connectedness with the need for social, racial and gender justice. Alexandra has research interests in Sociology and Development Studies with a particular focus on the intersections of poverty, race and gender. She is an alumni of the Institute of Development Studies and is a leading voice and activist in Black Lives Matter UK. In conversation with Richard Elliott from the Pickwell Foundation.
Nicaragua is one of the countries most affected by climate change. While the world is talking about the need for drastic action, the people of Nicaragua have been living with its escalating consequences for decades. This webinar marked the launch of our new five-year programme with our partner CEPAD. We are investing in their work in seven rural communities in Nicaragua’s dry belt — where long periods of drought are now followed by intense rain and flooding, and where hurricanes are becoming more frequent and more severe.
In honour of International Women’s Day, Amos Trust hosted a special webinar focusing on how climate change disproportionately impacts women from the Global South. Watch again as we hear from Marie Christina Kolo, Adenike Oladosu and Immaculate Akello — three fearless female climate activists, about the work they’re doing in their communities to fight against the climate crisis.
For our fifth episode of A Dozen Tuesdays we headed to Nicaragua where Amos Trust’s Karin Joseph was live in Teustepe with CEPAD Director Emily Reyes and Field Workers Harold Blandon and Joel Rodriguez, to celebrate CEPAD’s 50th anniversary. Emily, Harold and Joel updated us on their current work — particularly their new five-year programme with seven new communities around Teustepe in the Baoco region that Amos supports.
We work alongside grass-roots partners in Palestine, South Africa, Nicaragua, Burundi, India and Tanzania.
Reaching children on the streets, addressing their trauma, working with them and their families to reintegrate them into their homes, to realise their rights and recover their future.
Working with local and international peace activists, and partnering with grass-roots projects, to call for a just peace, reconciliation and full equal rights for all Palestinians and Israelis.
Addressing the impact of climate change and the causes of extreme poverty, building sustainable rural communities and empowering them to realise their rights.
Bringing people together to meet our partners from around the world, visiting the communities they work in and seeing their projects in action — building solidarity and lasting friendships.
Amos Trust
7 Bell Yard, London
WC2A 2JR
UK
Telephone:
+44 (0) 203 725 3493
Email:
[email protected]
Registered Charity No.
1164234
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