11: Honoring one of the SEWA
Bank's oldest serving Directors - Saraswatiben, a bamboo worker.
12: Some of SEWA Bank's Board
Directors waiting to speak at a Board Meeting.
13: SEWA
Bank Annual Lottery being drawn at the Annual General Meeting.
14: Vegetable and Fruit vendors
make up a substantial proportion of SEWA Bank clients.
14a: For all these self-employed women who work
from home - agarbatti makers, embroiderers, cotton thread manufacturers or kite makers, an
income generation loan from SEWA enables them to buy assets such as machines and increase
their productivity and incomes.
14b: For these homebased-workers, a loan from
SEWA enables them to buy assets such as machines and increase their productivity and
incomes.
14c: For all these self-employed women who work
from home, an income generation loan from SEWA enables them to buy assets such as machines
and increase their productivity and incomes.
14d: For
all these self-employed women who work from home, an income generation loan from SEWA
enables them to buy assets such as machines and increase their productivity and incomes.
15: Many
ragpickers are clients at SEWA Bank.
16: A unique service for SEWA
Bank clients - a receptionist that completes payment deposit and withdrawal slips on
behalf of the clients - who are mostly illiterate workers.