We enable women in Africa set up businesses to help them work their way out of poverty.
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Hi, I'm Abi and on the 1st
of May 2010, I was the first woman to attempt to swim the 25km across
Lake
Malawi... but I didn't make it!
I set off at dawn as planned but a
strong northwards current swept me in a huge arc of 35km and left me
battling, in the dark, after 12hrs of swimming, to make the final km
into shore. But the current and waves were like a conveyor belt around
the land and it pulled me past the last possible landing point - it was
too dangerous to go on.
The disappointment of being pulled back into the boat so close
to my dream left me reeling but has fuelled my determination to do this
even more! There are a few technical glitches to iron out (errr like
not dropping the GPS in the water) but the most important thing will be
to monitor the weather patterns that create the lake currents and choose the
right window in the year. Nature is not to be underestimated!
In the meantime I will continue campaigning for Microloan Foundation
and will use this experience of taking a risk and learning lessons when
things don't go to plan (!) to try and motivate women who are also
taking risks by having the courage to take out small loans to develop
their business ideas. Pushing physical limits is one way of finding out
what you're really made of and the confidence it generates can have
positive ramifications on all other areas of
your life. I would like to help Microloan Foundation to organise some
mountain walks and lake trips for some of the savings groups here in
Malawi and hope that these challenges energise women in the same way
mine has!
I will be updating the website soon with the
whole story of the 1 May swim attempt and will update everyone when I
decide the date of the second attempt!
www.lakemalawiswim.org
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MicroLoan Foundation is a social microfinance institution providing business loans & training to women facing poverty in sub-Saharan Africa. We have provided loan capital and training to over 390,000 women to help them build small businesses. This also supports 1.6M dependents - 2M+ lives in total.