| Eggs for Kids |
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With the help of the Canadian Ape Alliance, a group
of Congolese widows has formed a cooperative to run
a poultry farm. They can now provide for their families—and
help protect endangered gorillas in the long run. 
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, there are no social
safety nets for the widows of guards who protect gorillas
at Kahuzi-Biega Park. In addition, local schoolchildren—whose
diet lacks essential nutrients, including protein—suffer
from malnutrition, increasing their susceptibility to
parasites and infections.
Establish a worker-owned poultry-raising cooperative
and provide an egg a day to children attending a local
nursery school.
Enrich the lives of human inhabitants to help ensure
the long-term survival of the lowland gorillas who live
in the surrounding forest.
1. The women learn to manage a small-business enterprise.
2. They earn much-needed income to feed their families.
3. Children get nutritious eggs to augment their school-meal
program.
4. The community will see an alternative wood-stove
design that uses 70 percent less wood, used to boil
the eggs.
5. The gorillas are less likely to be hunted and their
habitat less likely to be damaged or destroyed by human
encroachment.
1. Funds to build the henhouses, buy the initial stock
of chickens, give training and get the enterprise going
were provided by Zerofootprint (Toronto) in the form
of micro-credit, which the widows are repaying, in part,
through provision of eggs to the school.
2. Acting through the DRC-based Pole
Pole Foundation, the Canadian Ape Alliance is helping
to make sure the program becomes fully independent and
self-sustaining within a year.
3. Canadian Ape Alliance guarantees the widows a market
for their eggs by purchasing an egg a day for each child
at Kahuzi-Biega Environmental School. In coming years,
the Alliance will raise money on an ongoing basis to
buy eggs from the widows for the school.
4. You can help ensure the success of this program
by donating to the Canadian Ape Alliance. Donations
are tax-deductible and tax receipts are issued through
the University of Toronto Great Ape Fund.
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