Maria Luisa Rosales García


Status: Paying Back

$725.00   Loan Amount
91% repaid

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Maria Luisa Rosales García
Location: Totonicapan, Guatemala
Activity: Crafts

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $725.00
Loan Use: Working Capital, Weaving
Repayment Term: 13 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Dec 15, 2008
Date Disbursed: Dec 4, 2008
Date Funded:Dec 15, 2008

About the Country

Country:Guatemala
Avg Annual Income:$4,155.00
Currency:Guatemala Quetzales (GTQ)
Exchange Rate:7.6028 GTQ = 1 USD



Doña Maria Luisa, at 63 years of age, is still working as a weaver engaged in the production of traditional women’s sashes. She works in a workshop of five looms and employees engaged in the same activity. She has been weaving sashes for 18 years. She lives close to her children in her residence which is in Paraje Chichaclan, Cantón Poxlajuj, in the Department of Totonicapán, Guatemala. Nowadays, the demand of her customers has grown but the economic circumstances have not been sufficient for her to accumulate her working capital. For that reason, she approached Asociación ASDIR to request a loan with the intention of buying raw materials, and thus increase her sales.

Translated from Spanish by Daniel Kvaka, Kiva Volunteer


Doña María Luisa cuenta con 63 años de edad, es casada de oficios tejedora, “elaboración de Fajas típicas para mujeres” cuenta con un taller de 5 telares, habita junto a sus hijos, cuentan con Cinco empleados para la misma actividad, lleva 18 años de elaborar fajas en su residencia que se encuentra en el Paraje Chichaclan, Cantón Poxlajuj, del departamento de Totonicapán, Guatemala, actualmente la demanda de su clientela a crecido, pero las condiciones económicas en que se encuentra no son suficientes para que ella pueda aumentar su capital, por tal razón acudió a la Asociación ASDIR, a solicitar un préstamo, con la intención de comprar materia prima y de esa manera poder aumentar sus ventas.


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Journal entries for Maria Luisa Rosales García


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Maria Luisa Rosales García
Location: Totonicapan, Guatemala

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Maria Luisa Rosales García by Asociación ASDIR in Guatemala. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 11 months, Asociación ASDIR will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Totonicapan, Guatemala
Dec 16, 2008
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Update on Maria Luisa Rosales Garcia
 
Entrepreneur: Maria Luisa Rosales García
Location: Totonicapan, Guatemala

We went to visit Maria Luisa in the afternoon at her workshop. She works with four other women to run a weaving business to make traditional mayan clothing. not only do the women weave (there are at least 5 looms ) but they also sew the fabrics into sashes and aprons. This group of women weavers experiments with colors and fabrics (even including some sparkly yarn in their weavings) while still maintaining the traditional weave designs.

Their business is healthy and demand is brisk (although it has slowed a bit in the last few weeks). Maria Luisa attributes their success to their innovative color and yarn combinations.

(I took a video, but have somehow misplaced the footage!)

For more information on traditional Mayan clothing (you can see Maria is wearing some in the photo), please visit this link:

traditional mayan clothing

About Kiva’s Partner:

ASDIR (Asociacion de Desarrollo Integral Rural---Association for the Development of Rural Communities) was founded by a handful of Mayan men and women in 1988. ASDIR started as a community-based organization working to develop villages and communities in the department (state) of Totonicapán. Guatemala. Today, ASDIR specializes in providing financial services and educational programs to more than 2500 clients in mostly rural communities throughout Totonicapán. ASDIR has five offices, serving over 100 communities. ASDIR has been a Kiva partner since 2008.

About Totonicapán, Guatemala:

Totonicapán is one of 22 departments in Guatemala and is located in the western highlands of Guatemala. The capital of the department, referred to as “Toto”, sits at an elevation of over 8111 feet (2495 meters) and the climate is relatively mild/cool. Over 2/3 of the 300,000+ residents of the department of Totonicapán live in a rural area and are primarily Mayan descendants who continue to speak their native language of K’iche. Weaving, agriculture (mostly corn), shoemaking and woodworking are the primary economic drivers, particularly in the rural areas.

Totonicapán, Guatemala


Posted by Lori Gibson Banducci from Totonicapan, Guatemala
Mar 23, 2009
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Kiva Message from the Field regarding Guatemala
 
Entrepreneur: Maria Luisa Rosales García
Location: Totonicapan, Guatemala

I have had the privilege of spending the last 9 weeks as a Kiva Fellow with ASDIR, Kiva’s field partner in the western highlands of Guatemala, in the district of Totonicapán. As you may know, all entrepreneur profiles on Kiva’s web site are posted by local Field Partners (microfinance institutions), which are organizations that lend to the working poor to help them lift themselves out of poverty. The role of the Field Partner is to screen each entrepreneur, upload his/her loan request on the Kiva web site, disburse the loan, and collect repayments.

You are receiving this email because you have made Kiva loans through ASDIR and we thought you might be interested in learning a little more about this Kiva partner.

ASDIR (Asociacion de Desarrollo Integral Rural---Association for the Development of Rural Communities) was founded by a handful of Mayan men and women in 1988. ASDIR started as a community-based organization working to develop villages and communities in the department (state) of Totonicapán Guatemala.

Today, ASDIR specializes in providing financial services and educational programs to more than 2500 clients in mostly rural communities throughout Totonicapán. ASDIR has five offices serving over 100 communities and has been a Kiva partner since 2008.

Totonicapán is one of 22 departments in Guatemala and is located in the western highlands of Guatemala. Totonicapán is also one of the poorest departments in Guatemala, with the country’s highest infant mortality rate, and almost half (49.7%) of its children are estimated to be suffering from malnutrition.

I’ve worked closely with some of the loan officers at ASDIR. (Loan officers are the heavy lifters in micro credit. See my blog Loan Officers-Unsung Heroes—featuring interviews with two of ASDIR’s loan officers.) What sticks with me is how difficult and important the job of a loan officer really is.

Because ASDIR serves primarily the rural poor, loan officers must all speak K’iche as well as Spanish. All the loan officers grew up in this community, so they know the people that ASDIR is lending money to.

When I hopped on the back of a motorcycle to accompany a loan officer on a recent borrower visit, I was surprised by how welcoming the borrowers were. We visited a family of Kiva borrowers - the Mom and her three grown daughters all had taken out Kiva loans. Rene, the loan officer, was greeted as if he were an old friend. Chairs were brought out and juice was served (see photo). It was clear that a trusting and warm connection existed. (I’ve witnessed the same warm welcome on visits to collect on delinquent loans!)

I have listened as loan officers patiently and compassionately explain to a family why they must continue to pay on their loan, even in the face of great personal hardship. I’ve watched them work with an individual to develop a repayment plan that is reasonable and achievable. I’ve heard them explain that the loan is not bigger because the repayment plan would be too burdensome. I’ve seen the pride on their faces and in their eyes when they talk about the positive impact their work has on their community and the people who live in it.

I also visited dozens of Kiva borrowers (hopefully you’ve received an update on your loan) to see, first hand, the power of micro credit to incrementally improve the lives of the working poor. From a woman who used her money to become her own boss sewing custom aprons; a construction worker who used his loan to repair his cement mixer (and used the left over funds to buy new equipment for his side disco/dj business); to a young father who told me that without the loan from ASDIR/Kiva to buy a loom, he would “have nothing.” No rags to riches stories, but certainly lots of small steps forward.

Kiva currently has over 110 loans with ASDIR, for loans totaling over $85,000. ASDIR is poised to grow its relationship with Kiva by posting more loans, so please be sure to check for new loans posted here ASDIR Loans Fundraising.

Sincerely,

Lori Gibson


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
May 1, 2009
Comments (12)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Maria Luisa Rosales García

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
March 2009 $60.42 $60.42 Repayment Received
April 2009 $60.42 $60.42 Repayment Received
May 2009 $60.42 $60.42 Repayment Received
June 2009 $60.42 $60.41 Repayment Received
July 2009 $60.42 $60.42 Repayment Received
August 2009 $60.42 $60.42 Repayment Received
September 2009 $60.42 $60.43 Repayment Received
October 2009 $120.84 $120.84 Repayment Received
November 2009 $60.42 $60.42 Repayment Received
December 2009 $60.42 $60.42 Repayment Received
January 2010 $60.38 Available Jan 1