About
The Reality on the ground
Widows are among the category of women whose rights are most violated, and widowhood is one of the most neglected of all gender and human rights issues globally. In 2019, The United Nations set aside 23rd June as the International Widows Day to create awareness and encourage more research into the plight of widows.
Challenges facing widow in Kenya and Africa at large differ from one community to another. Some of them include dispossession and denial of inheritance and land rights by the late husband’s family, which exposes them to extreme poverty, dehumanizing social norms and harmful practices such as cleansing rituals and widow inheritance, thus exposing them to the risk of HIV/Aids and other STDs, abuse of their rights and dignity, exclusion, stigma, loneliness, and sometimes lack of purpose.
Additionally, widows in Arid and Semi-Arid areas are more vulnerable to the effects of Climate Change that subject them to extreme poverty, leading to hunger, malnutrition, ill health, lack of shelter and clothing. They are also at risk of sexual abuse as a means of survival. Their children too may have to endure extreme poverty, illiteracy, child labour, prostitution or enforced labour.
Kareri Widows Organization offers holistic empowerment enabling widows to find purpose in life, improve their health, psychological and economic status, as well as social networks and access to justice. This contributes to elimination of stigma and enables widows and their families to live abundant and fulfilled lives.

