Six months ago, a 7.8-magnitude earthquake devastated Nepal. Heifer International and Heifer Nepal immediately acted to provide temporary shelter supplies to nearly 23,000 families in 97 Village Development Committees (VDCs) and across 13 districts who lost their homes and livelihoods.
Members of Heifer's Self-Help Groups and Cooperatives played a key role in immediate relief support before government or other assistance arrived, ensuring distributions went smoothly and each family received some support.
After those immediate needs were met by Heifer and other relief organizations working in the country, and because it was clear the rebuilding and recovery would require a long-term approach, Heifer established a revolving fund for communities that saw the worst damage. Participants advocated for this approach and felt it would allow the communities to make joint decisions about how to best distribute and utilize funds.
The fund is interest-free for two years. Participants will begin to pay back the funds 12 months after the initial loan, and all money will stay in the community to provide continuous support in the future. Cash flow in the communities will help boost the local economies, ensuring recovery is happening across communities and not in isolated pockets.
Reports from Nepal are showing our approach is having a large impact on helping farmers recover.
The path to full recovery will be a long one, but already Heifer participants are well on their way to rebuilding what was lost. We will continue to update the progress of these families.