Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi


Status: Paid Back

$925.00   Loan Request
$925.00   Paid Back

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi
Location: Nyarugenge/kigali, Rwanda
Activity: Used Clothing

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $925.00
Loan Use: Increase his inventory of clothing
Repayment Term: 10 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Dec 10, 2008
Date Disbursed: Dec 15, 2008
Date Funded:Dec 13, 2008
Loan Ended:Sep 15, 2009

About the Country

Country:Rwanda
Avg Annual Income:$1,000.00
Currency:Rwanda Francs (RWF)
Exchange Rate:554.7600 RWF = 1 USD



Greetings from Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi in Kigali, Rwanda! Eliphaz is 40 years old, married with four children and two adopted orphans.



This entrepreneur has a clothes shop where he sells various clothes for women, men, both children and adults in his hometown. Besides his business, he rents out two houses and earns about US$ 38 every month.



This entrepreneur is requesting a loan in the amount of 500,000 Frws to be repaid in 8 months. The loan use is buying more clothes for his inventory since he is expecting high sales during the Christmas festivities. His future plan is to open up a big clothing shop in downtown Kigali.


Subscribe

Lenders to this entrepreneur

Martin Family
Portland, OR
United States

Kenneth and Beth
Texarkana, TX
United States

Laurence
Antibes,
France

Chuck & Peggy
Spring Lake, MI
United States

Extreme Team
Clarksville, MD
United States

Pat & Don
Bedford, NS
Canada

maria
Raleigh, NC
United States

Megan
Milton, MA
United States

William
Mishawaka, IN
United States

Elizabeth
Portland, OR
United States

Janice
Toronto, Ontario
Canada

Anonymous
Elwood, Victoria
Australia

Victoria
Tallahassee, FL
United States

Mark
East Greenbush, NY
United States

Carolina
Lisboa, PORTUGAL
Portugal

David
Somerville, MA
United States

Kanyi
Plano, TX
United States

Terry & Lisa
Williams Lake, British Columbia
Canada

Anonymous
Newark, NJ
United States

Martin
Newton, MA
United States

John B
Coogee, New South Wales
Australia

Bill
Austin, TX
United States

Sara
Melbourne,
Australia

Anonymous

Sabanayagam
Princeton, NJ
United States

Marcus & Ayumi
Bayshore, NY
United States

Jan
Hamburg,
Germany

Tracy
Mount Colah, New South Wales
Australia

Margaret
East Doncaster, Victoria
Australia



Top Lending Teams for this entrepreneur


River Hill High School
Schools
2 Members

101 Cookbooks
Common Interest
813 Members

St. Luke's Episcopal Church
Religious Congregations
13 Members

Kiva France
Local Area
357 Members

Team Obama
Common Interest
3020 Members

Journal entries for Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi
Location: Nyarugenge/kigali, Rwanda

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi by Vision Finance Company s.a. (VFC), a partner of World Vision International in Rwanda. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 8 months, Vision Finance Company s.a. (VFC), a partner of World Vision International will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Nyarugenge/kigali, Rwanda
Dec 15, 2008
Comment on this entry

Kiva Message from the Field regarding Rwanda
 
Entrepreneur: Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi
Location: Nyarugenge/kigali, Rwanda

Dear Kiva Lender,

Thank you for supporting entrepreneurs in Rwanda! I am happy to be writing to you as the Kiva Fellow in Rwanda working with Vision Finance Company (VFC). VFC has been one of Kiva’s field partners for ten months. This means that in June of last year, VFC began posting some of its clients on the Kiva website to raise funds for their loans. To date you have funded loans for 168 VFC clients, lending a total of $137,850.

Many people know of Rwanda only in the context of the Genocide that took place here in 1994. While that violent history remains part of the lives of everyone here, there is much more to this country than a tragic past. The energy permeating the country is towards growth and development. The microfinance industry in Rwanda is an important part of the growth that is taking place here. Vision Finance Company targets the productive poor throughout the country and has social metrics in place to gauge their effectiveness at improving household standards of living. It has found ways to access rural areas that are overlooked by other MFIs in the country and as a result gets capital to rural entrepreneurs, particularly in the agriculture sector, that have no other access to capital. Ninety percent of Rwanda’s labor force participates in agriculture, so VFC’s ability to target and improve the output of the country’s farmers is imperative to the country’s continued growth.

The country’s growth is occurring alongside its attempts to cope with the Genocide of fifteen years ago. There is a juxtaposition of those who committed the Genocide and those who survived. Prisoners do manual labor all over the country, working on plots of land, building brick walls along roads, and doing various other public works projects in plain sight. They pass through lives as they stand packed in the backs of trucks and are taken between their projects and their cells. One of the most complex issues this country faces is how to go on, develop, heal, when the painful past remains present. After a horrific divisiveness, how is everyone supposed to come together again?

While I don’t have an answer to that question, I do feel like microfinance plays a role. After visiting a few of VFC’s clients, I understood that many were Genocide survivors. It took me a little bit longer to realize that they also serve the perpetrators of the Genocide. As is now the law in the country, VFC does not discriminate. Serving all qualified individuals in an equal opportunity way makes sense in theory but is quite complex in practice. Even the credit officers working with the clients often have their own stories of survival.

I recently met with a client whom I knew was a perpetrator of the Genocide. He was free because he had confessed his crimes, his confession was accepted as true by the gacaca court (a court system that has been established to process trials for accused genocidaires on a local level), and he had completed the assigned community service. Now he was back at home with his family, dressed in civilian clothing, and working in his businesses.

My immediate reaction upon meeting him was that he had such a kind face. I noticed his warm smile and friendly greetings to the staff. Then he shook my hand and it was just like so many greetings I’ve exchanged here before. It was a jarring interview for how totally routine it was. He was not a man you would pin as a killer. This client was the closest I’ve come to the reality that ultimately all perpetrators of the Genocide will be free. He put a face to the abstract impossibility that this country is facing as it frees prisoners from overcrowded prisons and reintroduces them to society.

Microfinance in Rwanda serves an important role as the country attempts to rebuild. Survivors and perpetrators alike are in need of the means to begin again to prevent against history repeating. As lenders to this country, you all are serving a role in its better future. VFC is attempting to collect updates for you on as many of its clients as possible, but in the meantime I hope this email helps you to understand the impact your loan is having. From Kiva, Vision Finance Company, and all of its clients, thank you for lending!

To see all of Vision Finance Company’s currently fundraising loans, please click here: http://partners.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&partner_id=117&status=fundRaising&sortBy=New+to+Old&_te=mj. To join the lending team created to support Rwandese clients, click here: http://www.kiva.org/community/viewTeamMembers/?team_id=5273.

Sincerely,

Julie Ross


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
May 1, 2009
Comments (18)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Eliphaz Ziremakwinshi

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
March 2009 $115.62 $115.62 Repayment Received
April 2009 $115.62 $115.62 Repayment Received
May 2009 $115.62 $115.62 Repayment Received
June 2009 $115.62 $115.62 Repayment Received
July 2009 $115.62 $115.63 Repayment Received
August 2009 $115.62 $115.63 Repayment Received
September 2009 $115.62 $115.60 Repayment Received
October 2009 $115.66 $115.66 Repayment Received