| SINCE 2014 Village Home has developed and continues to support projects in Bangladesh that improve people’s lives. Highlights of our work include: |
NEW | Bhasan Char Vocational Initiative
|
The Bhasan Char Vocational Initiative is a project, managed by Village Home, to provide vocational training tailored to the island's realities and offers a practical pathway to dignity and self-reliance.
When aligned with local demand, climate conditions, and humanitarian regulations, skills development can strengthen household resilience and prepare displaced persons for future durable solutions. In alignment with the Digital Bangladesh Initiative – Village Home is also developing a rural health information system designed to support clinics serving the Bhasan Char population. The system will provide secure patient tracking, basic clinical record management, and reporting tools that help healthcare providers monitor treatment, coordinate care, and improve continuity of services in a challenging humanitarian environment. |
Training and Schools
From 2014 Village home devised and implemented programs related to vocational training. Vocational training included sewing and a wide variety of producing handicraft items to be sold in Village Home's retail stores in Europe and the United States. MORE...
Women's Empowerment
Village Home created programs to empower women in villages that allowed them to earn three times the living wage through their production of handicrafts. The result of these programs enabled women to purchase homes and property in a short period of time. MORE...
Independence
Village Home's scheme to procure for export the rich cultural products made in the villages of Bangladesh insured participating woman had complete financial autonomy and in fact become the primary breadwinners of the household. MORE... Health care
Village Home started with the single clinic in Dhaka in 2014 and expanded to five across Bangladesh. The free medical treatment supporting care through partnering hospitals and clinics provides a service that is mostly unavailable to many in Bangladesh. MORE...




