West Africa · Timbuktu, Mali
Keep the value at home (beneficiation, not raw export)
Sahel Beneficiation Academy
Africa sells gold, cocoa and cotton raw and buys the finished goods back at a high price. How do we keep the value — and the skill — at home?
- Mansa MusaTurned gold into knowledge, cities and universities — not into waste.
- Thomas Sankara"He who feeds you controls you" — process your own cotton into clothing at home.
- Ahmad Baba"Books over gold": the real wealth is the skill in your head.
- Yaa AsantewaaAsante craft (kente, goldwork): raw material becomes culture and value.
Problem schärfen
We grow some of the best cotton on earth — and wear clothes sewn from it elsewhere. We sell cheap and buy dear. That is not bad luck, it is a system.
Gold alone does not make you rich. What you build from it does. I made libraries out of gold.
Exactly: raw material is a beginning, not a goal. The value is in the finishing — and finishing must be learned and kept.
Optionen sammeln
From raw to product in the classroom: cotton → thread → cloth → a finished piece. The children see where the value appears.
A workshop library: write the skill down and pass it on, so it does not vanish with one person.
Buy our own first — school uniforms from locally sewn cloth, local food in the canteen.
Invest the profit, don’t spend it — a share of every sale flows back into tools and training.
Abwägen
Which step adds the most value? Dyeing and sewing more than just picking — so start there.
Doable with simple means? Yes — a loom and needles fit any school; a gold smelter does not.
Does it keep dignity and quality? Only if we do it well — quality is the real protection against cheap imports.
- A mini value-chain project: local raw material → two finishing steps → a sellable product.
- A "skills library": each local craftsperson records one work step.
- A maths unit: what does it cost raw vs. finished? (make the value gap visible).
- A "buy our own first" rule: introduce one concrete local product in the school.
- Run the cotton→thread→cloth→product chain as a school project.
- Start the skills library with the crafts of the neighbourhood.
- Calculate the raw-vs-finished value gap.
- Adopt one local product for the school (uniform cloth or canteen food).