Briefings

A passage from India

June 18, 2014

<p>In India, there is no safety net for the poor. Driven by this harsh reality, a mass movement of approximately 8 million self-help groups involving over 100 million woman has emerged in recent years.&nbsp; These self-help groups have become a powerful driver of social and economic change, improving the lives of these women, their families and communities.&nbsp; The focus of these groups is to help their members to save money and to become involved in cooperative enterprises.&nbsp; This simple but powerful idea has recently started to take root in some of Scotland&rsquo;s poorest communities.</p> <p>18/6/14</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;</p>

 

Author: WE-volution website

A time line of progress

To see what some of these groups have been doing  – click here  get inspired

August 2010: A group of 13 women from 7 disadvantaged communities in Glasgow start meeting together to study and understand the ethos and impact of the Indian self-help group model.

January 2011: The women travel to Mumbai and Gujarat in India – the trip is called ‘Passage to India’ – to learn to interact with women involved in the self-help group movement. The group not only come face-to-face with grinding poverty but also find a deep sense of resilience and confidence amongst the women they encountered and a model they believe can help change the lives of women and their families back home in Scotland (www.apassagetoindia-pa.blogspot.com).

February 2011: On their return, the Glaswegians share the stories of inspiring Indian women they have met and their own life-transforming experience to a gathering of over 150 people and announce their plans to launch Scotland’s first women’s Self-Reliant Groups (SRGs). Passage to India is now renamed as Passage from India.

March 2011: The first SRG in Scotland is started by 8 women in the Provanmill community of Glasgow. Saving £1 each every week, they establish a successful Lunch Club for their community in the premises of St. Paul’s Church in Provanmill.

November 2011: The Church of Scotland Guild chooses Passage from India as one of the 6 projects they will sponsor from 2012-2015. Money raised goes towards establishing the Microfinance initiative.

May 2012: Passage from India becomes an independent Scottish Charity.

September 2013: Women@Work in Provanmill SRG goes on to establish a Community Interest Company, receives a small loan and launch ‘Fluff & Fold’, a Laundrette business.

October 2013: Scottish Government announces funding that helps recruit a dedicated 3-member staff team to grow the SRG movement.

April 2014: Passage from India is rebranded and launched as WEvolution (taking its cue from ‘we’ and ‘change’: change as a combined activity).