Here’s how the Box Aid process works:
1: Rescue goods and essential items bound for landfill.
2: Provide them to struggling individuals and families.
3: Reduce our carbon footprint by reducing and recycling.
As well as helping out the local community here in Chiswick, Box Aid also sends essential items (including clothes and materials) to individuals and communities abroad. For example, Box Aid has been helping the Batwa Tribe by providing clothing and other essentials, as well as materials for the tribe to use to create art and other goods that they can sell.
The Batwa Tribe are an indigenous Ugandan tribe who lived for decades in their ancestral forest lands in the Congo alongside silverback gorillas. They were displaced due to war in the Congo. To make matters worse, to make way for the famous mountain gorillas in Bwindi and Mgahinga forests, the Batwa were relocated without their informed consent or a public hearing. In the early 1990s, the Ugandan government declared the Semliki National Park a protected area and evicted all those who had entered and settled in the area, including Batwa.
The Batwa had depended on hunting and gathering from the forest, but today they live as squatters on the land of others. They are prosecuted and shunned by their surrounding communities and have no land to call their own.
The help that Box Aid offers them allows the tribe to work towards a more self-sustaining lifestyle in an empowered way, whilst ensuring that they are provided with essentials to keep them going.