
Our Geneseo alumni make a difference all over the world, including Rahama Wright '02, who started a skin-care business working with women's cooperatives in Africa, which in turn helps build sustainable communities, empowers women and, in turn, addresses the United Nation's Sustainable Development goals.
As a Peace Corps volunteer in rural Mali, Rahama Wright 鈥02 helped women develop the area鈥檚 first shea butter cooperative so they could have more power to harvest and sell shea seeds working together.
In Mali and as an intern with the U.S. Embassy in Burkina Faso the summer after her Geneseo graduation, Wright saw the need for more self-reliant income among women 鈥 and a better, more profitable way for them to be part of the shea supply chain.
Wright created in 2005, with a mission to empower women with sustainable income, training and opportunities, not just by selling raw materials to others, but producing valued-added shea butter and other finished products themselves.
鈥淚 had to create a new business model,鈥 she says.
It took seven long years to build Shea Yeleen: She spent the first two years researching grassroots organization, how to structure the operation, how to train women and how to identify and work with local leaders. The process came with it鈥檚 own set of challenges: She used all of her Peace Corps money, and then some. When money ran out, she had to leave her apartment; she slept on a blow-up mattress in her friend鈥檚 apartment.
鈥淗onestly, if I look back, I don鈥檛 know how I kept going. Everything was telling me, 鈥榯his is not going work.鈥 But I believed. It boils down to faith. I remember telling myself, I am committed to these issues, regardless if it takes a month or 25 years.鈥
Now, Shea Yeleen is sold online, and in retail stores, including Whole Foods. Shea Yeleen works with some 800 women in two cooperatives in northern Ghana 鈥 in Tamale and Damango.
Shea Yeleen provides living wages 鈥 $6 per day from the usual $2 per day 鈥 access to community health cards for family care, and an opportunity for savings. Most often, Wright says, the income is used for their children鈥檚 education.
It also funds dreams. In a video, Gladys proudly shows her small caf茅, opened from Shea Yeleen income.
鈥淚 think you don鈥檛 know if you can do something until you try, or someone opens your eyes that this is achievable,鈥 says Wright. 鈥淲e all just need a little encouragement and support to believe you can achieve something that you might ever have considered.鈥
Shea Yeleen cooperative women work in small facilities, in groups of 10, and produce butter, and most recently, shea butter soap. Products are shipped and labeled in the U.S.
Wright has received several accolades for her vision and success. In 2008, she was one of 80 women selected to participate in an Oprah Winfrey and White House leadership Project. She is a member of President Obama鈥檚 Advisory Council on Doing Business in Africa.
鈥淥ne of my proudest moments was when we brought some of the women to the U.S.,鈥 says Wright, so they could see Shea Yeleen on the shelves, and understand their position in the supply chain. 鈥淭hese are women who didn鈥檛 even have passports or birth certificates. Those moments hit home.鈥
One of Wright鈥檚 favorite images from her journey is of her with children of the cooperative members. She is crashing one of their dances.
鈥淭hat moment really captures why I鈥檓 doing this,鈥 says Wright. 鈥淭hroughout history, I have been inspired by people who were able to change the lives of the next generation. When I started Shea Yeleen, I said, 鈥業 might not be able to completely change a woman鈥檚 life. She may still have a first-grad education. But what if she鈥檚 able to change her child鈥檚 life, and they have a much different experience, and education and a different job?鈥
鈥 Story by Kris Dreessen
鈥 Photo by Adam Francis Purl