Supported by: The Member of Parliament (MP) Constituency Development Fund.
In 2004, Mahila Janachetana Kendra (MJK) launched a foundational 3-month Nepali Handloom Training program to provide young women and girls in the Mechi Municipality with sustainable vocational skills. This project marked a significant step in MJK’s mission to combine cultural heritage with economic empowerment, ensuring that traditional weaving techniques become a source of modern financial independence.
During the early 2000s, marginalized women in the Jhapa district faced limited access to formal employment. MJK identified several key barriers to their economic growth:
Vocational Gaps: A lack of structured training centers where women could learn marketable trades.
Financial Dependency: High rates of household poverty due to a lack of independent income sources for women.
Cultural Preservation: The risk of losing traditional Nepali handloom techniques among the younger generation.
Skill Acquisition: Providing more than 20 young women and girls with comprehensive, hands-on training in the art of Nepali handloom weaving.
Economic Empowerment: Enabling participants to produce high-quality textiles that could be sold in local markets, creating a direct path to self-employment.
Community Development: Utilizing local government resources, specifically the Constituency Development Fund, to invest in the long-term human capital of the Mechi Municipality.
Funding Support: Member of Parliament (MP) Constituency Development Fund
Lead Implementing Agency: Mahila Janachetana Kendra (MJK)
Local Scope: Mechi Municipality, Jhapa