Posted on 12/02/2008 4:01:09 PM PST by SandRat
| BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan, Dec. 2, 2008 More than two years of work on the part of a cultural leader in Afghanistans Panjshir province is coming to fruition with the completion of a chicken coop.
When the Panjshir PRT provided funding two months ago, Yaftali was able to take chicken coops to villages in the district. She brought in female teachers to train 150 families, and she has regularly checked in on the progress herself. Yaftali said she has been working for more than two years to get the chicken coop project funded and accepted by the local villages of Anaba. She said it was difficult to gain the support of villagers, and that the original attempts were turned down because they were led by men. Yaftali said she revisited the villages numerous times, promoting the project and hitting new hurdles with each encounter. Out of respect, I would wear a burqa and try to show the people that being an educated female wont hurt your women or children, but help the family, she said. The chicken coops are made from concrete, brick, wood and chicken wire, and are strategically placed in individual compounds. Each family received 13 hens and two roosters, as well as instructions on how to care for them. Families keep half of the eggs and sell the rest, Army Spc. Amanda Cutler, a member of the womens affairs team, explained. Yaftali said she hopes this is just the beginning of womens projects in Panjshir and throughout Afghanistan. In the spring, the U.S. Agency for International Development plans to fund additional chicken coop projects for Panjshir in the districts of Khenj, Dara and Paryan. (Army 1st Lt. Lory Stevens serves in the Task Force Warrior Public Affairs Office.) |
| Related Sites: U.S. Forces Afghanistan |
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good news bump!
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