Jenga Future: Building Resilience from the Ground Up
Born From Lived Reality
Jenga Future wasn't conceived in a distant boardroom. In 2022, its founders—who grew up in the very villages now ravaged by landslides and drought—turned personal tragedy into purpose. They'd watched neighbours lose everything overnight, seen farmland turn to dust, and recognized that conventional aid arrives too late and rarely fits communities' actual needs. Today, they co-create innovative solutions with communities to address both the chronic stresses of climate change and its acute shocks.
Roots for Resilience: Where Ecology Meets Livelihood
Their flagship initiative elegantly marries ecological restoration with economic opportunity. By planting deep-rooted trees in strategic locations, communities stabilize slopes during heavy rains while creating new income streams. As innovations director Jackson Kiptanui explains: "Trees hold the soil, reducing landslides. They create income so families can send kids to school."
What sets this approach apart is radical: communities identify their own problems and design their own solutions. When young farmers identified coffee as their preferred crop, Jenga Future distributed 3,500 seedlings to establish community-run nurseries.
Impact Taking Root
Over 12,500 seedlings now anchor hillsides across the region, engaging more than 850 farmers in climate-resilient livelihoods. Beyond stabilising slopes, agroforestry improves water infiltration and recharges groundwater—building resilience against both floods and droughts.
With over 80% of funds reaching programmes directly, Jenga Future has earned trust from partners like the Mastercard Foundation. Every tree planted strengthens something no disaster can wash away: community-led resilience.
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