Cemara C Group


Status: Paying Back

$4,075.00   Loan Amount
0% repaid

About the Group

Group Name: Cemara C Group
Group Members: Zakarias Rassi
Argop P. Rassi
David Pairikas
Dominggus Mauweni
Dominggus Taunu
Frengki Rassi
Hana M. Ledengongo
Ignasius Kaseh
Naema Rassi
Rodiana Taunu
Sarluta Mauweni (not pictured)
Theresia Kaseh
Yakobus Ledengongo
Yohanis Koroh
Anika Pirikas (not pictured)
Location: Kupang, Indonesia
Activity: Cattle

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $4,075.00
Loan Use: To buy cattle to be fattened
Repayment Term: 14 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: At end of term
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Mar 21, 2009
Date Disbursed: Feb 26, 2009
Date Funded:Mar 22, 2009

About the Country

Country:Indonesia
Avg Annual Income:$4,458.00
Currency:Indonesia Rupiahs (IDR)
Exchange Rate:11,974.8126 IDR = 1 USD



Cemara C Group is a group of 15 farmers who rely on farming and selling crops to meet their families' needs. This Group is led by Zakarias Rassi, a 77 year old man. Zakarias lives in Niukbaun Village, Kupang District of East Nusa Tenggara Province in Indonesia. He is married and has been blessed with 3 children. His children are: Thobias Rassi, 18 years old; Merry Rasi, 15 years old – in Junior High School Grade 3; and Marthen Rassi, 13 years old. Both Thobias and Marthen are not at school because they want to help their father (Zakarias) to earn money by farming. In this village, Zakarias works as a farmer who finances his family and the education of his children by selling banana, coconut and cassava. Sometimes the daily income that he earns is not enough to meet his family's needs. This is the reason why Zakarias wants to run another business. He is requesting a loan amounting to Rp 3,200,000 to buy cattle to be fattened. Zakarias is interested in joining the cattle fattening program because he can benefit by the profit of the cattle sale. He has a dream to send his children to the university.

The other members of this group also face the same situation as Zakarias faces. Their income from farming is not enough to meet their family's needs. And like Zakarias, they also want to improve their standard of living by running another business. They are interested in the cattle fattening program because they feel that this program can help them to generate more income for their family and for that reason, they are requesting a loan to buy cattle to be fattened.

Note: When the group picture was taken, Anika and Sarluta weren’t present, so their husbands replaced them in the group picture.




About Group Loans
In a group loan, each member of the group receives an individual loan but is part of a group of individuals bound by a group guarantee. Under this arrangement, each member of the group supports one another and is responsible for paying back the loans of their fellow group members if someone is delinquent or defaults. Learn more

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Journal entries for Cemara C Group


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Cemara C Group
Location: Kupang, Indonesia

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Cemara C Group, consisting of Zakarias Rassi, Argop P. Rassi, David Pairikas, Dominggus Mauweni, Dominggus Taunu, Frengki Rassi, Hana M. Ledengongo, Ignasius Kaseh, Naema Rassi, Rodiana Taunu, Sarluta Mauweni, Theresia Kaseh, Yakobus Ledengongo, Yohanis Koroh, Anika Pirikas by Tanaoba Lais Manekat Foundation (TLM) in Indonesia. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 12 months of this loan, Tanaoba Lais Manekat Foundation (TLM) will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Kupang, Indonesia
Mar 23, 2009
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Update on the Cemara C Group
 
Entrepreneur: Cemara C Group
Location: Kupang, Indonesia

Hello Kiva Lenders,

Last week we went to visit Zakarias Rassi, the leader of the Cemara C Group to find out about his cattle loan.

We met Zakarias near his cattle and then continued the interview at his house in the village. Although he is wearing the same t-shirt as in his profile picture, these photos were taken on separate days.

Zakarias is a talkative 77 year-old and has been working as a farmer most of his life. Actually, he has 12 children, but only 3 of them are of school age, and has a number of businesses which he has been running for many years. One of them is a moto-taxi business which he manages. The staff are his sons.

The loan amounting to IDR 3,200,000 has been disbursed to Zakarias Rassi. He spent the loan to buy cattle to be fattened within 12 months. Zakarias is currently in the second month of the loan. This is his fourth cattle loan. He used the money from the previous loans to pay for his children's school and to buy pigs.

Before feeds the cattle, Zakarias usually goes to the farm to prepare bananas and coconuts to be sold. After that, he goes to the cattle stall to look after the cattle and to feed it. So far, there’s never been a serious problem in fattening the cattle.

Zakarias hopes that he can feed the cattle so the cattle will meet the weight requirement to be sold and he hopes to get a high profit of the cattle sale. Zakarias hopes that he will able to have his own cattle one day. With the money from the sale of this cow he hopes to start a kiosk. It's never too late to start a new business!!!

If you would like to read more about Zakarias, our Kiva Fellow Kieran wrote this excellent blog about him:

http://fellowsblog.kiva.org/2009/05/04/77-is-never-too-old-to-start-a-business/

Thank you for supporting TLM and the people of West Timor,

TLM Staff


Posted by Kieran Ball from Kupang, Indonesia
May 5, 2009
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Kiva Field Update Part 1 - Message from Kiva Fellow in Indonesia
 
Entrepreneur: Cemara C Group
Location: Kupang, Indonesia

Hi Kiva lenders,

My name is Kieran Ball, and I am the Kiva Fellow at TLM in West Timor. I will shortly be finishing my fellowship and wanted to send a message to everyone who has been lucky enough to make a loan to this great new Kiva partner. The TLM staff are still excited and amazed by the number of people from all over the world who want to lend their clients money.

Although TLM plans to provide journal updates on 100% of their loans, we thought it would be interesting for lenders to read a bit about what happens "behind-the-scenes". I've also written a short tale and videotaped a trip to meet one of TLM’s first Kiva clients in a beautiful little village here in West Timor.

TLM News: Implementing Kiva

The past ten weeks in West Timor have flown by. I arrived in time to help Kiva Partnership Development Specialist, Rico Muñoz, with the initial training for the TLM staff. This went smoothly and was received well by the crowd of enthusiastic learners who gathered in the room.

Since then, despite a few minor blips with one of the newer Kiva systems, we've managed to post and fund up to our monthly limit for the past two months. Kiva wisely designates the first few months for new MFIs as the pilot phase. During the pilot phase, we must achieve a number of goals in order to prove that we will be able to cope with moving to the active phase. I'm happy to say that TLM is on track to complete all of their goals and will hopefully move to the active phase in the next month or two.

Also during my time here, I've been taking some photographs of Kiva clients for the Kiva PR guru, Fiona. Incredibly, I had the privilege of meeting a client who I declare has the best smile on Kiva. See what you think. I mean, my jokes are funny, sure, but a smile of this calibre is still unusual.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kieranball/3440995360/in/set-72157616650350143/

Despite being in a somewhat secluded location in the global scheme of things, TLM is keen to be a trendsetter when it comes to being web savvy. They are, as far as I know, the first or one of the first Kiva partners to have a Twitter account. You can follow their updates at this address: www.twitter.com/tlmwesttimor. Kiva coordinator Shanty updates it regularly, and if you tweet her, she will tweet back when she has a moment. Feel free to say hi!

I am also proud to announce that TLM has their first proper website after twelve years of operation, which I worked on when not busy with Kiva responsibilities. It's a basic website, but it’s an improvement over what was there before! You can find it here: www.ytlm.org.

Finally, I wrote a blog to introduce TLM to Kiva lenders, which you can find here, including a video of a trip to the field:

http://fellowsblog.kiva.org/2009/04/06/welcome-kiva-to-west-timor/

More recently, I blogged about Zakarias, a 77-year-old who is starting a new business:

http://fellowsblog.kiva.org/2009/05/04/77-is-never-too-old-to-start-a-business/.

I hope you will keep an eye out for the ever-increasing number of TLM loans that will be hitting the Kiva site soon. We are all very grateful for your support of Kiva, of TLM, and of the people of Indonesia.

Part Two, a Client Story, to follow.


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 11, 2009
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Kiva Field Update Part 2 - Message from Kiva Fellow in Indonesia
 
Entrepreneur: Cemara C Group
Location: Kupang, Indonesia

Story of a Client Visit: Yurita Natun (Betania Group)

Last week we went to the village of Naet to meet Yurita Natun and her family. Yurita recently took out a cattle-fattening loan with money borrowed from Kiva. TLM is the only Kiva field partner to offer noncash loans. Instead, TLM purchases a cow and delivers it to the clients, who feed and maintain the cow for a year until it can be sold for a profit.

Naet village is set in the hills about an-hour-and-a-half from Kupang city. I can safely say that Naet is one of the few villages I have penciled in as a potential retirement location! It is set in lush green jungle on bumpy dirt roads, with the sides of the valley extending both up and down from the village, and colorful flowers adorning the trees and houses. If this village were in the south of France, it would be doubtless be overrun with tourists.

Thankfully it is in West Timor, and the villagers are able to live a relatively peaceful life, farming the land and raising livestock. The local school just down the road has a gigantic playing field where soccer games often have boys and horses running around together. West Timorians love gardening, and like every village we pass through, Naet has carefully tended hedges, stylishly trimmed trees, delicately set garden paths, and aesthetically positioned potted plants.

We meet Yurita at her house, a small, bare wooden construction with a tin roof, and a neighboring kitchen outhouse. She has her 5-year-old daughter Reni, with her. She tells us that her husband Apner, is out hunting in the forest for an animal which I haven't heard of. After a brief discussion with Shanty, the Kiva coordinator, we decide it is similar to a squirrel.

This is Yurita's first cattle loan, so the usual journal questions about the effect of the loan do not really apply, as she will not see any profits until next year. Instead we improvise, which I find always makes the conversations better anyway.

We start by asking about her daily routine. We are all bowled over when she tells us she gets up at 4 am, early even by West Timor standards, to prepare breakfast and lunch for her husband and children. She spends the rest of the day feeding the cattle and tending to the family's crops, and usually goes to bed at 8 or 9 pm because she is tired from the long day.

I wonder how she keeps her brain active; does she have a television, does she read? She says she does have a television but usually never watches it, she leaves that to her sons. As far as reading goes, she mainly reads her bible. Her favorite book is Matthew.

We find out about her children. She ruefully tells us that her two sons, age 15 and 13, have just dropped out of junior high school to become full-time farmers like their dad. Although her sons are intelligent, they don't really like school, and the senior high school is too far from their village to make the trip each day.

I ask her if she has any hopes or goals for the future. She says that her one hope is that her daughter Reni, who is sitting on her knee and later appears eating TWO ice creams simultaneously(!), will complete school and be the first family member to attend university. She had hoped this for her sons, but unfortunately it was not to be.

Later I get to meet one of her sons, Ricky (15). He also received a cow from TLM. I ask him what his plans are now that he has left school. He explains that, apart from day-to-day farming, he will feed his cow until he can sell it for a profit of around $80. With that money, he will buy two pigs of his own ($40 each) and fatten them to sell. After doing this for a few cycles, he will have enough saved up to buy his own cow (approximately $300).

Before we leave, Yurita shows us her kitchen and presents us with a gigantic bag of cherry tomatoes she has grown. I later use these tomatoes to cook a decent Bolognese sauce! Thank you Yurita!

I made this short video/slideshow of our visit to see Yurita. I hope you enjoy it. http://www.vimeo.com/4489014.


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 11, 2009
Comments (6)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Cemara C Group

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
April 2010 $4,075.00 Available Apr 1