In February 2017 I was lucky enough to visit our microfinance partner in Pakistan, Akhuwat. Please read my series of blogs to share my experience and insights into this inspiring organisation.
If you are interested in reading more about Islamic microfinance, my colleague Dr Ajaz Ahmed Khan and renowned microfinance experience Dr Malcolm Harper will soon publish a book on Islamic microfinance, which contains a chapter on Akhuwat.
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Monday, 13 March 2017
Pakistan blog series | Day 4 - Khana Nou Branch and Delhi Gate Branch: How Lendwithcare works with Akhuwat
In February 2017 I was lucky enough to visit our microfinance partner in Pakistan, Akhuwat. Please read my series of blogs to share my experience and insights into this inspiring organisation.
The borrowers at the Khana Nou branch are also funded by Lendwithcare lenders. During my visit I observed many people either making a repayment on their loan or submitting a new loan application.
The borrowers at the Khana Nou branch are also funded by Lendwithcare lenders. During my visit I observed many people either making a repayment on their loan or submitting a new loan application.
Pakistan blog series | Day 3 - Akhuwat office: are they really as good as they seem?
In February 2017 I was lucky enough to visit our microfinance partner in Pakistan, Akhuwat. Please read my series of blogs to share my experience and insights into this inspiring organisation.
One of my tasks when on an evaluation trip for Lendwithcare is to ask questions from Lendwithcare supporters and potential supporters. Three questions I've been asked about our partnership with Ahkuwat are:
1. As a provider of interest-free microfinance, funded by voluntary donations*, are the donations from borrowers really voluntary or do they affect whether someone gets a loan?
2. Does Akhuwat prioritise Muslim borrowers?
3. The percentage of female borrowers is lower than in other Lendwithcare countries.
*Akhuwat encourages its borrowers to donate to Akhuwat's program to help their brethren once the borrowers themselves have gained through economic stability.
One of my tasks when on an evaluation trip for Lendwithcare is to ask questions from Lendwithcare supporters and potential supporters. Three questions I've been asked about our partnership with Ahkuwat are:
1. As a provider of interest-free microfinance, funded by voluntary donations*, are the donations from borrowers really voluntary or do they affect whether someone gets a loan?
2. Does Akhuwat prioritise Muslim borrowers?
3. The percentage of female borrowers is lower than in other Lendwithcare countries.
*Akhuwat encourages its borrowers to donate to Akhuwat's program to help their brethren once the borrowers themselves have gained through economic stability.
Pakistan blog series | Day 2 - Visit to Badami Bagh and Kot Khawaja Branches: meeting the entrepreneurs in person
In February 2017 I was lucky enough to visit our microfinance partner in Pakistan, Akhuwat. Please read my series of blogs to share my experience and insights into this inspirational organisation.
Funding from Lendwithcare over the last 4 years has enabled Akhuwat to open the Badami Bagh and Kot Khawaja branches in Lahore, where almost all borrowers are funded by Lendwithcare lenders. To ensure costs are kept to a minimum Akhuwat branches are very simply furnished - staff sit on cushions at a very low table, and the offices comprise just one room plus a bathroom.
While I was visiting the branches I interviewed several entrepreneurs to find out how much impact the loan has had on their business and life:
Funding from Lendwithcare over the last 4 years has enabled Akhuwat to open the Badami Bagh and Kot Khawaja branches in Lahore, where almost all borrowers are funded by Lendwithcare lenders. To ensure costs are kept to a minimum Akhuwat branches are very simply furnished - staff sit on cushions at a very low table, and the offices comprise just one room plus a bathroom.
While I was visiting the branches I interviewed several entrepreneurs to find out how much impact the loan has had on their business and life:
Pakistan blog series | Day 1 - Visit to Akhuwat’s office: so much more than microfinance
In February 2017 I was lucky enough to visit our microfinance partner in Pakistan, Akhuwat. Please read my series of blogs to share my experience and insights into this inspiring organisation.
As part of my job I am privileged to visit parts of the world that I wouldn't do otherwise.
One of the most memorable and inspiring trips I have taken recently was to Lahore in Pakistan. Despite the negative impression of Pakistan that the media sometimes present, it was memorable not because of danger lurking round every corner.
It was because I have never come across a more inspirational group of people than the staff of Akhuwat, led by their founder Dr Amjad Saqib.
The city and airport were much less frenetic that I'd imagined (although perhaps landing in Lahore at 2am had something to do with that!)
I had been to Delhi some years earlier and I still vividly remember how many people were at the airport.
It quickly became apparent that westerners are a rare sight in Pakistan, even in large cities such as Lahore. It took a few days to get used to being stared at, but I soon realised that as soon as I smiled, people would shyly smile back. And it wasn't long (in fact, I think it was the next morning in the hotel lift!) before I was asked for my first selfie - and it wouldn't be the last that week!
As part of my job I am privileged to visit parts of the world that I wouldn't do otherwise.
One of the most memorable and inspiring trips I have taken recently was to Lahore in Pakistan. Despite the negative impression of Pakistan that the media sometimes present, it was memorable not because of danger lurking round every corner.
It was because I have never come across a more inspirational group of people than the staff of Akhuwat, led by their founder Dr Amjad Saqib.
The city and airport were much less frenetic that I'd imagined (although perhaps landing in Lahore at 2am had something to do with that!)
I had been to Delhi some years earlier and I still vividly remember how many people were at the airport.
It quickly became apparent that westerners are a rare sight in Pakistan, even in large cities such as Lahore. It took a few days to get used to being stared at, but I soon realised that as soon as I smiled, people would shyly smile back. And it wasn't long (in fact, I think it was the next morning in the hotel lift!) before I was asked for my first selfie - and it wouldn't be the last that week!
Tuesday, 8 November 2016
RubyMoon lends 100% of its profits to Lendwithcare women entrepreneurs
Lendwithcare now has a community of over 33,000 lenders, supporting over 45,000 entrepreneurs around the world.
One lender is ethical swimwear company RubyMoon, who uses 100% of their net profits to lend to women entrepreneurs through Lendwithcare. RubyMoon has been lending for 5 years, and so far has made 179 loans to women entrepreneurs and entrepreneur groups. We got in touch with founder Jo to find out more about why she wanted to involve RubyMoon in Lendwithcare, and her lending story so far.
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Jo, founder of RubyMoon |
Thursday, 15 October 2015
Better evidence means less poverty
The primary purpose of Lendwithcare
is to help poor people to improve their lives through supporting them to access
loans for their businesses. Do we actually have any evidence that this is
happening? Certainly, we have a great deal of anecdotal evidence – in addition
to the periodic updates that we receive from some of the microentrepreneurs
that we have funded, each year my colleagues and I also visit and speak with
hundreds of individuals and groups who Lendwithcare supports in 11 countries in
Africa, Asia and Latin America. Although we do come across some persons for
whom nothing much seems to have changed, more often than not they explain to us
how access to loans over an extended period of time has enabled them to develop
their businesses, stabilise or increase their incomes, increased their
self-confidence, self-esteem and economic independence, make improvements to their
homes, and sometimes as a result even spend more money in areas such as their children’s
education and the health of their families.
However, this approach is not
particularly scientific – there are often other important reasons aside from
improved access to loans why their lives have improved, it might be that we are
simply meeting the more ‘successful’ microentrepreneurs, people are simply being
polite, or they are telling us what they think we want to hear.
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Ghulam Raza interviewing an entrepreneur at Akhuvat |
Labels:
Ajaz Khan,
Akhuwat,
CARE International UK,
lendwithcare,
MFIs,
micro-finance,
microfinance,
Pakistan
Friday, 24 April 2015
Impressions from a first time visit to Pakistan
Most cities have them ... In fact most towns, villages
and neighbourhoods do too. The lofty saying that marks that particular place
out from all the rest. London’s is the famous Samuel Johnson quote that says "those
that are tired of London are tired of life." So it was not surprising when
I visited the cultural heart of Pakistan a couple of weeks ago, Lahore, that I was
informed by many proud Lahoris that I could now count myself amongst the ranks
of those lucky enough to say they have truly lived. As the famous Punjabi quote
goes, those who have not seen Lahore have not been born.
Shakeel, Joana and I outside the Lahore Cultural Museum |
Tuesday, 21 April 2015
Tackling gender inequality in Pakistan | The Akhuwat clothes bank initiative
Following his recent trip to
Pakistan, Dr Ajaz Ahmed Khan tells us about a very interesting project
implemented by our MFI partner AKHUWAT.
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Guriya, who works in the Clothes Bank |
Transgender persons, or khwaja
siras as they are often referred to in Pakistan, routinely face a high level of
discrimination in access to health, housing, education and employment as well
as ridicule, intimidation and the threat of physical violence. Most khwaja siras are forced to
live at the margins of society and earn an income by dancing at ceremonies such
as weddings and births, and most commonly from begging. In an almost
unprecedented example of positive discrimination Dr Amjad Saqib, the founder
and executive director of Akhuwat, Lendwithcare’s partner in Pakistan, decided
when he established a clothes bank in May of last year to only employ khwaja
siras to sort, repair, clean and pack the clothes. Such regular employment
opportunities are almost unheard of for transgender persons. Akhuwat now
employs six full-time khwaja siras, namely Naghma, Naina, Guriya, Faisal,
Moshin Deedar and Guru Taj, in the clothes bank which is based in Akhuwat’s
head office in Lahore.
Thursday, 12 February 2015
Promoting solar power in Pakistan
The city of Lahore is renowned
as the literary, educational and cultural heart of Pakistan and has a long
history of beautiful architecture dating in particular from the Mughal period
with buildings such as the Badshahi Masjid and the Shahi Qila or Lahore Fort.
Shakeel and Rehan from Akhuwat on the roof where the solar panels are located |
Tuesday, 2 September 2014
Guest blog | You don’t have to wait for Christmas!!
This blog was originally posted on Richard Kemp's blog and has been re-posted here with his permission.
I have to admit that I am not an easy person to buy things for at Christmas and birthdays. I am lucky that I can afford to buy things that I need and have very few things that I want to buy on top of that except for stamps (I am a stamp collector).
Pictured above is Ghulam Qadir who has a recycling business in Pakistan |
Tuesday, 12 August 2014
More than just microfinance - How Pakistan’s largest Islamic Microfinance Institution supports one of the country’s most stigmatized communities
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© Akhuwat 2014 |
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
Eid Mubarak | Celebrations & Charity from Pakistan
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© Akhuwat 2014 |
Thursday, 6 February 2014
"Liberation loans" offered by our partner in Pakistan to free poor people from spiralling debt
After the 2014 Oscars ceremony, Steve McQueen's film
“12 Years A Slave” deservedly took home the big prize of best picture. However, it is important
to remind ourselves that the barbaric practice of slavery
is not something we can consign to the history
books. It is still a contemporary issue in many countries around the world.
The epic 1957 Bollywood film ‘Mother India’ movingly portrays the story of a family struggling to survive against the machinations of a local moneylender. Many decades later this is still one of the rare examples of Indian cinema vividly reflecting the reality faced by millions on the Indian sub-continent, and instances of local moneylenders charging usurious rates of interest remain as prevalent as ever throughout much of South Asia.
As
well as providing loans to people wanting to establish or develop their microenterprises,
lendwithcare’s partner in Pakistan, Akhuwat, provides ‘liberation loans’ to
people who are struggling to repay debt that has been taken from local moneylenders.
In most instances, borrowers took out small loans at interest rates of up to
20% per month and the debt has spiralled out of control. Sometimes borrowers
have already sold what few assets they own, yet still struggle to keep up with
repayments. Shahzad Akram, Akhuwat’s Chief Credit Officer, recalls instances
where young borrowers have even committed suicide and some moneylenders
demanded that borrowers sell their daughters to repay the debt. In parts of
southern Punjab and Sindh it is not uncommon to find borrowers and their
children who have been forced to become indentured labourers for feudal
landlords as they struggle to repay debts that were often taken out many years
ago.
Tuesday, 7 January 2014
Does faith matter? A blogpost by Dr. Ajaz Ahmed Khan
Does an association with faith encourage more prompt repayment of microloans and are the staff of faith-inspired microfinance institutions more motivated?
After recently returning from a visit to Pakistan, where I was analysing the operations of an Islamic microfinance institution, I am tempted to answer yes to both questions. The microfinance institution in question is Akhuwat, a lendwithcare partner. The organisation derives its name from the Arabic word Mwakhwaat or brotherhood and was established in 2001 by Dr Amjad Saqib. It has grown quickly to become one of the largest specialist providers of microloans in Pakistan – it now has almost two hundred thousand active clients, including many non-Muslims, served by more than 250 branches located throughout the country.
Friday, 9 August 2013
Making loans and transforming lives in Pakistan
Safiya and her husband, Khuda
Picture: © CARE
|
It is quite fitting that as the holiest month in the
Muslim calendar, Ramadan, draws to a close this week and Muslims around the
world celebrate the arrival of the new moon, we at lendwithcare.org
will be celebrating the successful inclusion of our first Islamic Microfinance
partner, Akhuwat in Pakistan.
Labels:
Akhuwat,
business,
DFID.,
Eid,
entrepreneurs,
Islamic Lau,
micro finance,
micro-loans,
microcredit,
microfinance,
Muslim,
Muslims,
Pakistan,
poverty,
self-employment,
Sharia Law
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