 Ia ka nige kaka kaka na ma bila My name is Francena Ngozi and I'm based in the rural area of Lepalale. I'm the founder of Waterberg Women Advocacy Organization. In short, it's a work. We're trying to make sure that we capacitate women and empower women to be able to overcome these effects of climate change. We want to tell our story. We want everybody to understand how mining affected communities are living. Women are the ones who are bearing the burden. Number one, when there is polluted water, women are the ones who are going to use that water to do the laundry and to cook. And women are the ones who need to have an idea of how to clean that water. Our tradition taught us that men are superior and women are bigger. And now, instead of women changing that, it needs us as women to start at the kindergarten phase, to teach our kids that they are equal. There is no boy who needs to do a man's thing and there is no girl who needs to do a woman's thing. There's no man and woman work. We all share the choice. Building resilience, it starts with us as communities to start by getting more knowledge and working together. The unity, the solidarity is a solution. But a solidarity with action. The lesson that I learned is that love yourself and also love your neighbor. And love the place that you are in so that you may be able to clean after yourself.