Christine Anyango Omollo


Status: Paying Back

$150.00   Loan Amount
35% repaid

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Christine Anyango Omollo
Location: Kisumu, Kenya
Activity: Used Clothing

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $150.00
Loan Use: To buy clothing stock and vegetables
Repayment Term: 14 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Jun 1, 2009
Date Disbursed: Jun 16, 2009
Date Funded:Jun 1, 2009

About the Country

Country:Kenya
Avg Annual Income:$1,445.00
Currency:Kenya Shillings (KES)
Exchange Rate:78.3500 KES = 1 USD



Christine Anyango Omollo is a 31-year-old widow who takes care of two children aged 16 ad 14. They are both in school. She sells second-hand clothes, purchased at Kibuye market (Kisumu’s largest open-air market) and sells them by going door to door in Nyamasaria. Her challenges are that there are so many other people also selling used clothes. and the wholesalers have raised the price of bales. Christine has thought about starting a new business to sell vegetables from Nakuru in Kibuye. Her hopes for the future are to have a big business, to send her children to university and to own her own home. In her free-time she likes to watch videos and take her children on little tours.


In this video, you can hear me greet Christine saying "Idhi Nade", which is Luo for "How are you?" Christine responds, "Adhi maber," meaning "very good." Most people living in Kisumu descend from the Luo tribe, the same tribe as Obama's father. At the end, you will hear me fluctuate between Kiswahili and Luo saying "Asante Sana" in Kiswahili, meaning "thank you" and "Erokamano", which in Luo, means "thank you." The voices you hear in the background are people coming for a weekly K-MET borrower meeting. To see what one looks like, check out the first video in this blog post.


K-MET, the NGO distributing the loan, is unique in that it is not a traditional MFI. Rather, it is a development corporation focused on raising health standards in Kenya. You can read more about K-MET’s work.


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Lenders to this entrepreneur

Matt
San Francisco, CA
United States

Terry
KivaFriends.org , St. Louis, MO
United States

Terri
Hayward, CA
United States

globalista
Washington, DC
United States

One Million Dollar Team
New Holland, PA
United States

SALA KAKBANK
Sala,
Sweden



Top Lending Teams for this entrepreneur


Stanford University
Colleges/Universities
190 Members

Flann's Testing Team
Other
7 Members

One Million Dollar Team
Common Interest
28 Members

Journal entries for Christine Anyango Omollo


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Christine Anyango Omollo
Location: Kisumu, Kenya

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Christine Anyango Omollo by Kisumu Medical & Education Trust (K-MET) in Kenya. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 11 months of this loan, Kisumu Medical & Education Trust (K-MET) will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Kisumu, Kenya
Jun 16, 2009
Comment on this entry

Kiva Field Update - Message from Kiva Fellow in Kenya
 
Entrepreneur: Christine Anyango Omollo
Location: Kisumu, Kenya

Greetings from Kenya!

I’m Alison Carlman, a Kiva Fellow working with K-MET in Kisumu. You’re receiving this e-mail because you contributed to a loan for one of K-MET’s borrowers on Kiva. Thank you for supporting these inspiring business people. I wanted to give you an update about what many of them are doing!

Most of K-MET’s borrowers are volunteers promoting health and education in their communities. This means that not only are they micro-entrepreneurs (selling vegetables, doing tailoring, or running some other business in town), but they also regularly take time out of their working day to visit orphans, children, widows, and other sick or vulnerable people in their community. They work with K-MET supervisors to refer malnourished children and ill patients to the outpatient clinic or to the hospital. They also make sure that caregivers have the right information about how to care for their families and neighbors.

The community health care workers (mostly women) form a corps of empowered volunteers who are changing their communities from the ground up; many of them live on less than $1 a day. Earlier this week, a woman told me that she’d like Kiva lenders to know that “we visit the sick. We take care of the sick. At times, the sick will not have anything, and we are forced to give money from our own pockets so that they can eat.” This is truly a group of people who are sharing their small amount of resources with each other to serve more than 4,000 at-risk people in Kisumu.

I’d like you to see this short video demonstrating the work that community health workers do and the conditions in which they work and live. The first shot is of Alice, a Kiva borrower and tailor in the Nyalenda slum of Kisumu. She is pictured at her sewing and embroidery stall. I followed her as she and her K-MET supervisor, Beatrice, visited some of Alice’s patients in the community. I hope that by seeing and hearing the story of Alice you are as inspired as I am by the work that K-MET’s Kiva borrowers are doing!

Thanks again for your support of K-MET and Kiva entrepreneurs. Please consider joining the K-MET Fans Lending Team to continue following this field partner.

Kiva Love,

Alison Carlman

KF8, K-MET Kisumu, Kenya


Posted by Zack Turner, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Sep 10, 2009
Comments (5)

Journal Update
 
Entrepreneur: Christine Anyango Omollo
Location: Kisumu, Kenya

Christine Anyango Omollo lives in Nyamasaria, Kisumu; where she also runs her sole business of hawking second hand clothes. She is a mother of 2 children – a boy and girl, but separated from her husband which makes the breadwinner of her family.

Christine is on her first loan. She used it to get new stock, pay school fees and buy uniform for the children and saved the rest. She says business is doing well and follows it with a grin, looks down then up and adds that at times it gets really frustrating but she expects a boom due to forthcoming Christmas holidays. She plans to go buy a bail of clothes at wholesale – she says this has a guaranteed profit because she currently buys at retail price which gives her a low profit margin.

In the future she plans to apply for a second loan which she says she will use to expand her current business and then proceed to buy a parcel of land for her son.


Posted by John Asuke from Kisumu, Kenya
Oct 7, 2009
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Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Christine Anyango Omollo

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
August 2009 $2.94 $2.94 Repayment Received
September 2009 $11.76 $11.76 Repayment Received
October 2009 $11.76 $11.76 Repayment Received
November 2009 $14.70 $14.70 Repayment Received
December 2009 $11.76 $11.76 Repayment Received
January 2010 $11.76 Available Jan 1  
February 2010 $14.70 Available Feb 1  
March 2010 $11.76 Available Mar 1  
April 2010 $11.76 Available Apr 1  
May 2010 $14.70 Available May 1  
June 2010 $11.76 Available Jun 1  
July 2010 $11.76 Available Jul 1  
August 2010 $8.88 Available Aug 1