African Bolga Baskets
Patience Bawa Abakuri saw a need in her country of Northern Ghana. The terrible cycle of poverty continues, especially in the rural areas where weather combines with other factors to hold the people in the grip of deprivation. She saw that it was the children who suffer most. Patience believed that by improving the incomes of the poor rural women, the fate of the children would also improve. Based on this belief and acknowledging the value of the women's talents in weaving and creating products, she established her Enterprise for the primary purpose of helping women to find markets for their products. She identifies women in the community who have the skills to produce desirable items such as baskets, pottery, beads, or textiles. When a market for any of these products is located and an order is received, the artisans are engaged to make the products according to the specifications of the particular order. Before the artisan begins, she is asked to make a prioritized list of her needs. She may need food, utensils, cloth for clothing, children's school uniforms, fees or supplies. Pat buys these items and gives them to the woman, to be paid for out of the proceeds of the order. When the product is ready, the weaver is paid half the price, and the other half is applied to the items she took as a need. This continues until she has finished paying for the items she has received. Then she may take other needed items. Pat also locates and makes available other products, besides those produced by the women, in order to help raise the funds necessary to provide as many items as possible on the needs lists. These other products include drums, masks and wood carvings.

Currently Pat's product line includes baskets of many sorts, hats, mudcloths, batiks, drums, masks and hand-made beads. Patex uses fair trade practices. No order is too small or too big.  Every order helps put food in the bowl of a child or provide other necessities for him and his family.  Mr. & Mrs. Dominic and Patience Abakuri of Patex Enterprise maintain not only direct business contacts, but personal relationships with the women weavers in the Yekini tribe, and pay the weavers according to fair trade guidelines. He has chosen not to go through the hoops and expense of becoming certified with the Fair Trade Association, but follows, and often exceeds, the fair trade guidelines.

Fair Trade means an equitable and fair partnership between marketers in the developed "first world" and producers in underdeveloped parts of Asia, Africa, Latin America, and elsewhere. A fair trade partnership works to provide low-income artisans and farmers with a living wage for their work.

Patex is committed to paying our artisans fair and satisfactory prices for their products.

Patex abhors and strongly discourages the use of child labour in any form throughout the entire production processes of our handcrafts.

Through our Support Programs, Patex returns some of our profits into the participating communities to enhance the social lives of our artisans.

Patex seeks to build self confidence in our artisans by demonstrating that their crafts are valuable and that they are entitled to a decent income from their labour.

Patex encourages our artisans to adopt environmentally friendly and sustainable methods of production which will assist in preserving our planet for future generations.

About Bolga Baskets

PATEX ENTERPRIZE
GHANA, WEST AFRICA
Link to African Bolga Baskets in Store
Phone:  1-406-250-8544 email:  contact@firstchoicedecor.com