These entrepreneurial dressmakers are saving lives in Congo. Photo: Claude Ndayake & Luc Kambere for Un Jour Nouveau

The most beautiful coronavirus masks in the world

Eastern Congo Initiative
5 min readMay 19, 2020

How the women of Un Jour Nouveau turned $500 in fabric into $50,000 in sales — and saved countless lives

Months ago, Un Jour Nouveau (UJN), a local community organization in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, was planning to use $500 in capital from ECI to strengthen their dressmaking program, a social enterprise that helps women in North Kivu uplift their communities with training in business, leadership and in-demand skills. UJN planned to use half the money to set up a display of students’ handmade clothing at the 2020 Women Of Congo exhibition, and to use the other $250 to buy fabric and supplies.

As the pandemic overtook their plans, the women’s entrepreneurial agility transformed that $500 grant into infinitely more.

The UJN workroom with masks. Photo: Claude Ndayake & Luc Kambere for Un Jour Nouveau

Program director Claudine Nshokano explains: “With materials we bought before the pandemic, we had already made a profit of $255. But when we noticed that our clients weren’t interested in buying clothes because of the COVID-19 crisis, we pivoted to making fabric masks. Individuals, businesses and organizations quickly came to us to stock up. Then we won the contract to make 50,000 masks for MONUSCO, the UN peacekeeping force in the Congo, to distribute between now and June. We hired 50 dressmakers, 47 women and three men, to work tirelessly in order to produce an order of that size. And if all goes well, we will deliver another order of 50,000 right after that.”

These will be no ordinary masks. The women in the UJN program are training to be dressmakers, so they bought fabric for dresses. Soon, people in the Congo will be wearing what might be the most beautiful coronavirus masks in the world. “At a time like this, a little bit of beauty can make a profound difference in someone’s life,” says ECI executive director Abraham Leno. “I am very proud of what Un Jour Nouveau has done, and I am honored we could be part of their work.”

A victory for public health

These are no ordinary masks. Photo: Claude Ndayake & Luc Kambere for Un Jour Nouveau

The benefits of UJN’s agile pivot from dressmaking to mask-making are immense.

Most importantly, tens of thousands of people in Congo will have masks to wear when they have to be around others — potentially preventing hundreds of thousands of new COVID-19 infections.

“In Congo and all over the world, it’s now recommended to use masks to slow the spread of the virus and help people who may have the virus without knowing it from transmitting it to others. Masks are useful in public settings like busy marketplaces where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain,” says ECI medical coordinator Johny Muhindo, M.D. “Having those reusable masks help prevent the shortage of professional masks reserved for healthcare workers. These masks will absolutely save lives wherever people wear them.”

A triumph of social enterprise

Masks are only part of how Un Jour Nouveau is contributing to the national pandemic response. A manufacturing startup called LUNOC, incubated in UJN’s entrepreneurship program, will provide 2,500 bottles of liquid soap for MONUSCO’s sanitation efforts. Un Jour Nouveau will also provide 200 handwashing facilities throughout North Kivu.

Masks ready for packaging. Photo: Claude Ndayake & Luc Kambere for Un Jour Nouveau

The masks, though, are special. Beyond their incalculable benefits to public health, UJN’s pivot to mask-making has done something just as important: With skill, courage and business acumen, the women in the dressmaking program turned a $500 grant into more than 100 times more in sales.

That kind of profitability would be an impressive achievement for any small business. But for the women of Un Jour Nouveau, it means much more than just a happier balance sheet. “This work is leading to greater profitability for our dressmaking workshop,” Claudine says. “But above all, it helps the women in precarious economic situations — military widows, combat veterans, women living with HIV — who do the work.”

Click here to help the women of Un Jour Nouveau make more of the world’s most beautiful masks.◼

The most beautiful coronavirus masks in the world. Video: Claude Ndayake & Luc Kambere for Un Jour Nouveau

Pendant cette période de COVID-19, le port des masques fait partie des mesures de protection pour limiter la propagation du coronavirus. C’est dans ce sense que Un Jour Nouveau a reçu de ECI le matériel de couture pour renforcer la production de son département des femmes à fin d’apporter sa contribution au problème actuel en confectionnant les masques lavables. Cette production est maintenant très sollicitée par les individus, les entreprises, et organisations, notamment la MONUSCO, qui, dans un projet, va procéder à la distribution des cent mille masques dans les deux communes de la ville de Goma. Cette activité aide aussi à nourrir les familles des femmes militaires et veuves, d’autre ex-combattantes, pendant cette période de crise économique. Ceci avec la main d’oeuvre qu’elles reçoivent de la confection en tant que couturières.

During this period of COVID-19, wearing masks is one of the protective measures to limit the spread of the coronavirus. With that in mind, ECI gave Un Jour Nouveau’s women’s department some sewing materials to help them contribute to the current problem by making washable masks. These masks are highly sought after by individuals, companies and organizations — in particular MONUSCO, which will distribute 100,000 masks in the two communes of the city of Goma. This work will also help feed the families of military women, widows and ex-combatants during this period of economic crisis — above and beyond the work they will get in the clothing industry as seamstresses.

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Eastern Congo Initiative

We support the Congolese people as they share their boundless potential with the whole world. Founded by Ben Affleck and Whitney Williams in 2010.