Until 2004, Janete Guilherme earned a living as a seamstress in the north zone of Rio de Janeiro. Separated and chief income earner, in order to work she left her two young daughters at a community nursery in the Salgueiro complex, in São Gonçalo, where she still lives today.
When many of the children became ill, the nursery management gathered Janete and other mothers to investigate the root of the problem. Most of the women worked as rubbish collectors, without appropriate working conditions. The consumption of contaminated food, the below-average level of education, the absence of professional qualifications and the very low self-esteem made those families’ reality even worse.
But Janete was never one to moan. On the contrary, she decided to lift her head up high and to create an association that could provide training and collective income generation. Thus, the Women of Salgueiro Project was born, an initiative today supported by Enel, which has already served more than 5,000 families: