What We Do

Rupantor is a gardening program designed to empower individuals with disabilities in the Northwest region of Bangladesh. By integrating nature and physical activity, Rupantor aims to break barriers faced by individuals with disabilities, fostering a supportive and inclusive community. Through hands-on engagement in gardening activities, participants not only experience physical rehabilitation but also gain a sense of accomplishment and community.

Our Projects

Gardening

The vocational training skills taught enable our beneficiaries to work for a wage in the extensive hospital grounds and staff gardens. Vegetables and plants are grown from seeds and cuttings and sold along with compost produced from vermiculture. We provide garden services for individual customers living in the residential area and for different Lamb-Project departments like the Training Centre, Guesthouse, School and Hospital. These are ongoing standing orders throughout the year.

Paddy Farming

Tending to a 4100 m2 plot, we sow rice, yielding a rewarding harvest. Our gardeners and staff eagerly participate in LAMB’s inaugural rice harvest. We process a portion for internal use, selling to staff members, and supplying rice mills account for our distribution. 

Animal Husbandry

Our beneficiaries play an important role in the care of our 10 cows, 9 goats and 8 sheep. They feed them and take the animals to the pastures, clean their barns and watch over the animals. Our beneficiaries are very happy as we can offer a wider variety of work. We are hoping to start a poultry farm soon as well. 

Cooking Skills

 Under supervision, gardeners learn to cook lunch. They make shopping lists and buy fresh ingredients from markets, following a different menu each week. The first week they cook vegetables, rice, and lentils and subsequent weeks they cook fish, chicken, and mutton. Washing plates and utensils is a shared responsibility, with cleanliness kept a priority. 

Fish Farming

 Our fish farming initiative utilizes a rented pond, where daily feeding and periodic cleaning ensure optimal conditions. During the rainy season we introduce small fish from the hatchery, representing five diverse varieties. Harvested using nets, the catch supports our cooking skill program.

Vermicomposting

Using earthworms, we make Vermicompost by turning organic waste, mainly cow dung, into a nutrient-rich fertilizer. We dump cow dung in concrete rings and let earthworms feed on it. The excrement from the worms works as soil conditioner. The earthwork fertilizer is natural and environment friendly. With rising demand for organic products, our workers help produce and sell the fertilizer for Tk 15 per kilogram.

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