“Even after graduating from the training, I still received start-up support (funds),” Miriam says.
“I got an additional new sewing machine to support me to establish my shop. I also received other materials like a table, chairs, scissors and more.”
Miriam is eager to share her good fortune, and has been advising other young women on how to follow in her footsteps.
“I want to help others so they will not have to go through what I went through,” she smiles. “I want them to learn a skill like I did.”
Turning dreams into reality
Today, Miriam earns money by sewing dresses and school uniforms from her home, living with her husband and their two children, now nine and six. Their traditional Ghanian home includes other extended family members, such as parents, brothers and sisters, their wives and children. The household is a small community of about 20 people.
But Miriam is ambitious and is striving for a new level of success. Her next goal is to earn enough to purchase a shipping container to house her growing business. But to have her own shop, away from the family compound, means taking on her own apprentices to train in order to grow her business and client base. Miriam’s supportive husband has already bought a small parcel of land for the new shop and they are working together to save money for it.