GWC Strategic Plan provides and promotes entrepreneurship training, workshops, webinars, and one-on-one support to women in general and black women in particular, including immigrants, refugees, and low-income to understand the processes of a startup and the implementation roadmap of the multi-years operations, and to address the lack of skills. For women interested in agriculture, GWC helps them understand the importance of nutrition for human well-being. GWC also understands this development will dismantle the roots and underlying causes of poverty. GWC’s strategic plan goal is to bring awareness to the international community of women to help sisters from developing countries and donors to invest in them by providing entrepreneurship resources. It is urgent to help and involve women in the development of millennium objectives 2030. Pragmatic solutions come from women because of their vulnerability to suffering imposed by society. This imposition to challenges increased the capability of women to excel in problem-solving when given the right opportunity.
GWC helps women benefit from small business entrepreneurship, gain financial stability with thriving businesses, and access capital to startup businesses. GWC’s vision will extend to provide more opportunities in other areas in the future. However, GWC offers ongoing support, training, and workshops in a culturally and linguistically familiar, understandable, and friendly environment to clients. GWC commits its effort to train women to attain stability, change challenges to opportunities, and gain the tools, skills, and knowledge needed to exit poverty.
Initiator for Global Women Community (GWC)Rose I. Atumba is a former refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Self-taught English As a Second language from ABCs to ESL level five. She is a mother and earned her Master’s in International Community Development, a BA in Interdisciplinary Studies from Northwest University focusing on business and science, after an Associate of Arts degree in pre-nursing from Highline College. She carries a background as a pharmacy technician in retails before forcing into higher education. The effect of growing up very poor taught her that hard work, determination, faith, and love could be the only things a person like her can afford. Rose gained diverse experiences and assumed many functions in her native country, the Democratic Republic of Congo, before becoming a refugee due to the first DRC war of 1997.
After spending two years moving from one refugee camp to another in Africa, she received resettlement in the United States, where she is residing today while working on Global Women Community to expand it worldwide. Rose can be reached at (425) 435-8325 or email her at
rose@globalwomencommunity.comNida Ntita, Marketing and Engagement
William Koy, Administration and Operations
Jaden Anzetaka, Media and Technology