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These Mini Stockings are an adorable adornment for any holiday package, a unique ornament for every Christmas tree, or a sweet accessory to your seasonal decor.  Perfect for teacher or co-worker gifts, mailing to a college student or handing to a neighbor, tuck a gift card inside or a seasonal soap and lip balm from our Bath & Body collection to complete a simple but impact-full present.

 

Each of these hand-sewn fabric stockings is crafted by artisans in Kenya using scraps of African fabric and hand-rolled recycled paper beads. 

 

These darling creations provide jobs and wages for men and women who have been displaced into the Kibera slums, offer kids programs to their children, and support soccer (football) clubs with the slum's residents through our partners at Grain of Rice Project.  

Gift Card Mini Stocking

$8.00Price
  • Kibera, the largest slum in East Africa, is located in Nairobi, Kenya. It's hard to know exactly how many people live here, but a recent showed that there are approximately 235,000 people in this 1 1/2 kilometer area. The residents live in small, overcrowded shacks that are about 12 x 12 feet.  These houses are made of mud and sticks with corrugated tin roofs. There is no indoor plumbing in Kibera and residents must share a toilet (which is a simple hole in the ground) with up to 50 nearby shacks.

    Residents often have to walk far to purchase and collect water, which is carried back to their homes in jerry cans. Electricity has been expanded by the government in recent years, but it is often spotty. In the past, many houses had electricity all wired illegally to one pole, which creates a serious fire hazard.

    Kibera is extremely polluted.  Until recent years, there was no garbage pick-up and now it is inconsistent at best.  Trash, food scraps, and even human waste are scattered about everywhere. The garbage leads to huge sanitation and health problems.  HIV+/AIDS, teen pregnancy, and unemployment are widespread. Parents struggle to provide basic needs for their families and to afford the fees required to send their children to school.

    And Yet..

    Despite all of these hardships, Kibera does have a vibrancy and an aliveness to it.  There is often loud music spilling out of houses, people making jokes, and entertainment in abundance.  Kibera is almost like a small city, in that most basic purchases can be made within the slums.  Unless they are employed outside of the slum, it is common for people who live there to only leave occasionally every few months.

    [source: Grain of Rice Project]

  • Handmade in  Kenya by Grain of Rice Project

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