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Burial
societies provide for the here and now
IRIN
News
June 08, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/95607/ZIMBABWE-Burial-societies-provide-for-the-here-and-now
In low-income
suburbs like Chitungwiza, a dormitory town about 30km south of the
Zimbabwean capital Harare, burial societies have long played an
important role in helping their members meet the costs of burying
family members, but increasingly they are helping to boost livelihood
opportunities for the living.
Homadi Chibwano,
58, from St Mary's in Chitungwiza, has chaired the Gule Burial
Society for the last 10 years and is proud of having helped transform
it from a savings scheme into a profit-making venture that employs
three people.
About 15 residents
of Malawian origin, mostly men, formed Gule in 1994 with the aim
of preserving their burial traditions. The society experienced financial
problems over the years and nearly collapsed during the economic
crisis that afflicted Zimbabwe from 2000, but it now has 105 members,
each of whom pays a US$5 monthly subscription.
Two years ago,
Chibwano convinced the society's members that a business venture
was needed to improve their finances and ability to contribute whenever
a death occurred. They decided to launch a brick moulding business
that now generates an average profit of US$400 a month.
"Burial
societies should no longer be about death only, but must help us
live a good life as well," Chibwano told IRIN. "Our
main business remains assisting each of our members when they or
their family members die, but we also need to improve our livelihoods
while we are still alive."
The society
is now in the process of setting up a small grocery shop in the
home of one of its members.
"Our bank
account is growing steadily. Members can apply for a loan whenever
they have pressing financial needs and our committee sits down to
assess the applications," said Chibwano.
"When
we are big enough, we will consider sharing the profits on a regular
basis," he added.
Traditionally,
burial societies in Zimbabwe and elsewhere in the region have functioned
as a means of informal insurance for low-income earners who rarely
quality for life assurance policies and would otherwise struggle
to afford the high cost of a funeral which can be as much as $2,700
in Harare.
"The majority
of the people who belong to burial societies are poor and unemployed.
They don't qualify for life assurance policies because they
are not in formal employment," said John Robertson, an economic
consultant, who notes that burial societies as evolving in response
to changing times.
"They
retain their identity as social grassroots groupings guided by the
need to provide decent burial to their members, but they are increasingly
realizing that their role will be easier if they extend it to generate
income to cater for their social needs," said Robertson.
He added that
burial societies' commercial ventures would remain small and
informal unless members received training and support to improve
their management skills.
Medical
loans
Nzira Yedu (Our
Way) Social Club, another burial society in Chitungwiza, started
a tombstone-making project eight months ago that employs two people
as stone carvers but is yet to generate a profit. However, the society
has managed to accrue enough savings from its 85 members'
monthly $10 subscriptions to extend loans for medical expenses.
"Hospital
fees are beyond the reach of many. Even when a person is involved
in an accident, we assist with loans," said Raina Mhembere,
Nzira Yedu's treasurer.
She added that
many of the society's members were living with HIV/AIDS and
regularly approached her for loans to cover the costs of treatment
for opportunistic infections.
Burial societies
have traditionally been dominated by older people, mostly men, but
this is also changing. In Mufakose, a populous suburb about 10km
southwest of the capital, young professionals are increasingly signing
up.
Sylvester Chidziva,
20, a messenger with a law firm, was inspired to join Afterlife
Burial Society after his father, a long-time member who had fallen
on hard times, got a loan from the society so that Chidziva could
do his A-level examinations three years ago.
"A number
of my friends who have decided to join our parents in the societies
also benefited from their loans," he told IRIN.
Chidziva and
his contemporaries are part of the drive behind using burial societies'
capital to start income-generating schemes. He hopes to help Afterlife
start a funeral parlour in the future.
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