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Success Story
Farah Women’s Garment
Production Center offers
employment opportunities
and job skills
Women Tailors Design Their Careers in Farah
Photo: Elaine Eliah/USAID
Nazo, one of the top tailors at the
garment production center, loves
designing women’s clothing and can
reproduce designs pictured in magazines.
“I came to the Garment
Center because I appreciate
the opportunity to work
outside of my home,”
said Nazo, one of 50
seamstresses working out
of the USAID center. “I like
making women’s clothes
– any size, any type.”
In western Afghanistan’s Farah Province, women have few
opportunities to go to school or work outside of the home. Even
when they possess a useful, income-earning skill like tailoring,
many women stay at home during the day for cultural or security
reasons.
To provide a safe place for aspiring women tailors to gain new
skills and earn an income, USAID opened the Farah Women’s
Garment Production Center. Dozens of women applied for
positions, and the local Community Development Council
accepted 50 of the most promising seamstresses. These
women had been working from their homes using pedal-style
sewing machines and were ready to enrich their skills.
The center’s new machinery, such as buttonholers and
embroidery machines, enable the women to produce highquality
clothes more efficiently. USAID provided a month of
training on machine operation and garment mass production
techniques. The women at first found it difficult to use the new
generator-powered sewing machines, but eventually embraced
the technology.
Nazo, one of the center’s best tailors, started sewing when she
was 15 years old and is pleased to use her skills to earn a living.
“I came to the Garment Center because I appreciate the
opportunity to work outside of my home,” Nazo said. “I like
making women’s clothes – any size, any type.”
Show her a photo and she can craft the dress or suit pictured.
Each day, Nazo can produce up to three shalwar kameez, the
two-piece outfi ts that Farah women prefer for casual or dress
wear.
Shalwar kameez sets designed and sewn at the center are
selling briskly for about $5 each. Most of the marketing so far
has been by word of mouth. Nazo happily said, “I don’t really
have any problem selling the clothing I make.”
Now that the Farah Women’s Garment Production Center is
well-established, USAID will help the women tailors further
improve product marketing and develop sustainable business
plans.
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