A loan helped to buy pandanus for her weaving business.


Anna's story

Meet Anna. She is married to a farmer and is the mother of two grown-up children. They all live together under the same roof.

Anna makes a living for her family from weaving. She joins a group of women in their village to weave. They can weaves mats, fihu and taʻovala in different sizes and styles. Anna and other woman in the group weave the fihu within two weeks and then sell it at a good price, and some other women can weave the taʻovala.

She does weaving three days a week, and two days a week she helps her husband in growing different crops in their own field for the family's needs. This weaving business is the only source of income for her family. According to Anna, she earns a good income from her taʻovala when she sells them, and she uses that money to cover all the family's weekly needs and wants weekly and to make her weekly loan payment.

This loan aims to help her in buying more pandanus to use for her weaving business.


This loan is special because:

It provides women with credit in a country where alternative financing is extremely scarce.



Loan details


Lenders and lending teams




Loan details