I'm Kenyan and I know this is going to hurt my pockets a little since I just started using Ugandan shea butter, but they need to increase the price, especially when selling internationally. These hard working women deserve to profit more from it. I'm ashamed I didn't know about the limited supply and how much work it took to produce it.
the problem is that the middle man always earns the most, the ones that do all the hard work earn less ;-( to preserve the nature and keep it local which is best for them and the environment, the international demand should be keeot minimal..... most products are produced hugely but end up in rubbish when they reach abroad and the locals are left harmed for no good reason.
Fellow Kenyan here. This was so informative! I use the butter as well. Let's hope M7 is going to put some of that newly-discovered gold to good use and invest in modern farming and processing equipment so that these women can earn more.
The problem is the world n how it has formed in the market. The middle men always get the profit when really it should be that the original sellers HIRE the middle men n pay them little to sell instead.
I agree it should be $75-80 a jar overseas. I think it’s also about preventing a war. Are they protected? What’s stopping a group from taking it away from them?
I want to thank you Business Insider for finally coming to my home village. Shea butter is a very nutritious oil and medicinal as well. I'm proud of you. Thanks for the good work
Can you tell me if there is a brand or web site i can buy this? I want to purchase some for my mom but want my purchase to go to the communities and people more then some inport/export company.
@@tripsquared_greenworks It is basically made by indigenous women who have no websites or companies. It's sold locally in the market. However, arrangements can be made and have it shipped to you.
I would love to buy this straight from these women! I will definitely do some research to find out how to purchase this directly from them as opposed to giving my money to some POS corporation!
I wish you guys had a better regulatory government dealer. Selling it to companies or local dealers prob yields very low income. Government should step in, and export it at better prices for a better profit to the workers. Africa is rich in resources , if govt steps in and manages exports . It can really boost the local economy.
Yes, and crash the market. Price it too high and only the lucky ones will be able to afford it. Retailers will pass additional costs to end users and consumers.
Hallelujah 🙌. Our part of the world getting coverage. Earlier today it was Kenya's black gold (coffee). Thanks business Insider for promoting our products. African products are rare-earth.
I would definitely like to see these women have a facility to do this work and make it easier on them but be able to sell it themselves to those markets that want it. That deforestation is a problem in all areas where Indigenous live. I wish them well and would love to buy shea butter directly from them.
Hi Joan! I'm a grants management professional working in Nairobi. If you're interested, we could partner and upscale the value chain from a social enterprise stand point. HMU.
Hi Joan, I work and come from the community where these women are producing this product , I will be delighted to connect you to them and be able to share Thier product with you
We use both West and East African Shea. However, the East we use sparingly as it is more expensive but it melts faster and absorbs quicker. It is a great product and I am thankful for these ladies.
In Uganda, the Shea trees grow more abundantly in the northern region. When I was in high school in the central region, an Acholi friend from the north used to bring a homemade appetizer made from Shea. He called it "moya". He described the tree from which the stuff was made but we had never heard of it. He loved that stuff. But it tasted awful to the rest of us, which was ok for him because it meant that he didn't have to share it with us.
As an Acholi I totally understand u.. it's just that we grow up eating it so it's delicious to us.. in the village it's even a meal in poverty stricken home.. it's melted by steaming then salt is added to it . Then u eat it as sauce with either boiled cassava.. potatoes.. even posho🤦🏿♀️😅 but cold pressed Shea butter isn't eaten
I love Shea Butter! Since using it, my skin has definitely benefited from it as I have a chronic condition that dries my skin. I never knew there was another type of Shea depending on which side of the African continent it is made in. I will gladly pay more to support the hard work that goes into making the butter. These ladies are making a difference in a lot of lives, and they deserve to be compensated!
That's something totally new for me, I always used Ghanian Shea butter which is amazing, but I would like to know more about this Ugandan and Sudanese Shea butter, such an interesting topic, I love Africa and I'm proud to be African!
@@boingbong7348 they said the price increases after exporting it. That’s a huge fuel cost, vehicle cost, labor cost, marketing cost, retail overhead, packaging cost, etc, etc, etc, etc. I understand in a Utopian society everyone would get 100% and all. But you have to understand business. If the corporate side didn’t do their job, the ladies would never sell beyond their village. Think
@@treygregory5360 maybe it would be better if they didn’t sell much outside their Village though bc it sounds like they are over farming / running low on their resources. Also all the extra transport and packaging just creates waste / pollution. Is there really no way to grow these trees in other areas?
@@patrickormerod3472 it probably is. But this is the one time where they at least show that the company doing the harvesting and producing are actually being the primary benefitors. Went online to look up their product and I see that they at least show they're trying to do good.
In Dagestan, we have similar product, but we skip last step. We don't separate oil from the mass. We eat this mass and its called 'urbech'. We use mostly seeds of flax or apricot nuts for this. In finally for better taste we mix it with honey and ghee oil. Дагестан вперёд!!!!
Shea butter has antiinflammatory, antifungal, anti aging, antibacterial, antioxidant properties... It helps boost collagen production & promote cell regeneration.. It also reduce stretch marks, fine lines & wrinkles.. I love cold pressed shea butter🥰🥰 bt it’s mostly expensive 🥲🥲
In cosmetics its mixed with other ingredients and packaged pretty. Its cousin is thicker, almost a soft hard paste but shaved thinly then held in the hand, body heat softens it to a useable 100% pure organic state and its far cheaper.
the expense is worth it if the money if passed on to it's actual harvestors, creators/curators...fact is most of the inflated price goes to the pockets of Loreal, P&G, Uniliver, etc....
Yeah, I can attest that this is not the price in Uganda. I buy a kg of high quality shea butter in Kampala for 9 USD. Most of the profit goes to companies abroad.
I like the ugandan shea butter. We always mix in our meals but i have never liked processing it. I find it so hectic but thanks to my mother who always does that.
Yeah of course it's better you're not burning everything out of it. These women would have their minds blown if they just had someone come with a welder and weld a bottle jack in place of their hand crank.
Proud to watch a video about Uganda that is focusing on the bright side rather than always the dark stories about my motherland. Thank you Business Insider. Btw Business Insider Uganda also has Black Castor Oil, how does it compare with the other Black Castor Oils from Jamaica, Haiti, etc? 😀😀
I immediately went to find some nilotica shea. I’m broke but my kid suffers from eczema and loves shea during flair ups, it’s one of the only products she’s willing to use when it’s in the inflamed, painful stage. But she dislikes how thick it is and how it sits on her skin so long before absorbing. I’m hoping this might be what she’s been wanting. Also I put an occlusive layer on ad a last step in my skin care evry night, bc I have dry skin normally and I’m using tretinoin. I have a feeling this will replace my normal balms.
nilotica soap and oil helped clear my baby's eczema completely. i would highly recommend getting a good quality product that is completely pure and hasnt been processed further
Well why don't you try virgin coconut oil or sesame seed oil , like half an hour to 15 min or so before having a bath , spread it on the skin, and use a gentle body shampoo to remove the excess 🙄, it's still cheaper than shea butter.
@@tempest031 we’ve used coconut oil since she was a baby, it’s just not thick enough. Like her fav product so far is when I made her balms/butters using shea or coco butter, and coconut oil but it’s such a pain to make. The Nilotica looks like the butters I make. Also she’s a teenager now and prone to teenage acne, and coconut oil doesn’t really work for her face where she’s been getting the worst of the eczema in recent years. I’ve read some people have a reaction to coconut oil that causes acne. coconut oil is great for when the flair ups flair ups on her hands and arms are past the red inflamed stage, and in the dry, scaly, itchy stage.
@@nancygitonga714 yeah k found some cold pressed Nilotica I’m going to try. It’s only 2 oz but it’s $9 so it’s a good tester. If it works I’ll buy the larger tub that’s a lot more expensive. Also I highly rec Shikai advanced therapy borage oil lotion. It’s wonderful for dryness and when your past the worst part of the eczema. It’s literally the only lotion my kid will use. I also have dry skin and I’ve never had lotion work as well as this one. They also make a borage oil soap made specifically for pole with skin conditions. It can be hard to find but Amazon has it. There is the normal borage lotion and it’s great too, especially in summer, but for the most extreme dryness, and for skin that’s recovering from an eczema flair up, I can’t rec the advanced therapy enough.
I have used both Western and Nilotica shea butter I do prefer both. It’s hard to find the East African Shea Butter unless you know Ugandan who live buy you some on their return trip from home in the region where it’s produce. The women need to produce various products and sell the products online and towards tourists visiting and diaspora moving to country. I prefer buying brands made by the indigenous groups directly it supports their families and communities directly instead of through third party brand.
I am a Ugandan Canadian based in Toronto. I do have Uganda Shea Butter. Please let me know if you are in North America. Will certainly send you some. Thank you.
Thank you for speaking the truth. Each is unique in it own way and has its own use. West African Shea butter is an actual BUTTER not just some semi liquid . I didn't like the way this whole video puts down the West African Shea butter
@zaezi189 The video isn't putting West african shea butter down whatsoever. If you have actually compared the two, you would realise there is a HuGE difference between the two. Most companies nowadays are looking for shea that easily melts into products which is east african shea butter. I used to buy West african shea butter, and it was still good. It just required a lot of patience and I had to melt it, whereas my South Sudanese shea doesn't need to be melted, so I prefer my country's one.
When u are to develop a community, u dont have to bring in external product or external help but instead you should build from what the community has and what it can produce locally. The people in northern Uganda are really suffering with poverty. This is a great opportunity and it is sustainable.
Blame all this to Museveni. As you've said, you don't have to bring external help.... In western Uganda, there's plenty of cattle keepers, our meat and milk are still consumed locally. The Govt hasn't helped farmers, for coffee u already know the Pinetti plan with Museveni. It's the same thing that happened to Vanilla farmers on central Uganda in the early 2000's. Did you hear about cotton growers and what happened to them? Man if you understand how M7 has caused poverty in Uganda you would wish he dies tomorrow
When I heard "Shea Butter" I didnt really think of any variety whatsoever; though now I've clicked on the video I can learn it exists and there's a difference.
What I don't hear being said is how much of the sales do they get back for the hard work they put into making the butter? 3 weeks to complete a product means more work gets put into it, so it makes sense for the price to be up too with the quality being that nice. And shea butter has been helpful for my skin problems but wow, what I get doesn't soak in that fast. It's more like the other version where you have to keep rubbing it, but I have figured out a way to thin it and it still works the same for moisturizing.
They get very little, they dont make more than 5 000ugx per day which is 1.2$ . That is why people in Uganda dont care for those trees. Reach people see big money in that buisnes but really locals wont get anything.
The tree and its nuts looks similar to the indian mahua tree.. Mahua nuts r also used for cooking oil.. I think we should also try to make butter from it..
But people (labourers)won't be aware of demand and profit of this product and people in middle make profits fooling innocent people paying them few bucks
I feel like traveling to Uganda just to see this lovely women's and then support them financially, even with the little I have I wouldn't mind to do that ❤️❤️❤️
West african Shea is firmer when working with it. I used it in the US many of times by mixing it with Mango butter and other oils to help it absorb better in the skin. However, eastern shea is good in its own way, but it is to soft for some application that I make. I do like it, but I do blend it with other butters like mango or murumuru to make the final product semi firm. Both sheas actually has their uses. I only find that, one absorbs quickly and the other doesn't. I like and make a product where it is going to asorb a tad bit quicly in the skin and keeps a very light hygrated hair.
Its amazing to see their hard work and efforts, and the beautiful product it turns into however although i do love this product i think that the price should still be higher. These women work very hard especially considering they do all of this without factories or heavy machine production.
look at their hand. you can tell that the shea butter had been making them smooth, shine and pretty. I have my respect to those hard working lady in west Africa.
The world we live in is sooooo different from the world they live in. Can y’all imagine doing this on a daily basis? I mean their strength and diligence is impeccable 💪🏾.
I pray these women receive fair wages for their hard work. The price of the oil should be increased. I never knew what cold pressed oil was, until this video. I love Shea, Black seed and Coconut oils!!!
they should call it Ugandan butter. It gives it more of a presence and also let us know that there are valuable resources in africa, and they deserve more respect and fair value of the hardwork. Not exploitation
Thanks for uploading this content. I used to work part time in a store in UAE. A customer asked for a soap with Shea butter as main ingredient. But we had that particular brands papaya and lemon flavored soaps. And the customer showed us the photo of the Shea butter flavoured soap. We tried hard to get it and the efforts were in vain. It wasn't available in Amazon either at that time. Now i know why the hell that particular soap was damn hard to get.
@@DanBrown96 yep, these people figured out that if you crush something and squeeze it stuff comes out... That's like basically the same with every other plant 🤣 Yeah I agree with you. They're not amazing for figuring that out they're amazing for working with what little they have.
@@psirvent8 I mean besides that it still works, it is still clean and well maintained, most food equipment that you see nowadays wear off in just a couple of years
Lovely video. I have a lot of respect for these hardworking ladies. I use Baraka butter - all types in my cosmetic making and their produts are fabulous. If cosmetic industry supports these countries by sharing theor profits with these ladies it will be heartwarming feeling of justice. I, in my own little way help my purchasing their products to make my pain meds and other cosmetics. Love their Shea , cocoa butter and Kombo butter. Thanks to all the lovely ladies who help in their own way to keep other ladies around the eorld occupied and helping diectly and indirectly make DIY poducts. I dont sell my poducts. IMake them ahead every year and distribute it to my family and friends.
@@eliazali_4200 Oh That's not good. How do these trees reproduce??? May e Scientists and Botanists can research a way to grow them!!! Yes? By the way...Thank you for your reply🙂
Southern Africa is just so different from rest of Africa. We simply generally don't have things which are common in the rest of Africa eg Shea nut, cassava, palm trees in large numbers, till recently moringa was unheard of etc.
@@GreaterEthio It's weird. I'm 50 now I've never seen or eaten cassava in my whole life because in Zimbabwe it's unknown. Yet cassava is a staple in Nigeria etc. I've never seen yams either. Never mind kola nuts etc. All these things we know of from books and TV. We don't have palm oil and many other things
We always want cheap items but the process of doing it is hard labour Thank god I don’t do bargains It takes time and sweat to get something done U pay what u ask for
One of my favorite products from moisturizing i’ve been using this product ever says I was 10 years old now and 36 and I still purchase it which shows it is a great product
And that is why the African people are the most beautiful in the world! Although I'm a white woman born & raised in south Louisiana, I was blessed to have been raised by a beautiful Creole woman as the only white child (other than my 2 brothers) in a community of African American/ Creole people. She always told me "Baby black don't crack & that's a fact" & boy was she ever right! I miss the smells of Shea butter/ Coconut oil/ Softee/ Blue Magic/ Pink Moisturizer & more! My beautiful children are half African American/ Creole & I dreamed of them having that beautiful kinky coily hair as I was taught to do many beautiful African styles as a younger woman but they both have very thick wavy Caucasian hair... Still love it tho! This was such a great episode!
Repent and follow Jesus my friend! Repenting doesn't mean confessing your sins to others, but to stop doing them altogether. Belief in Messiah alone is not enough to get you into heaven - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36). Contemplate how the Roman empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13. Revelation 17 confirms that it is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years to accomplish the religion of the Israelites C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate though because you can start a relationship with God and have proof. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life. - Revelation 3:20 Revelation has been unfolding since Jesus died. The Popes have claimed to be equal to God and set themselves in Jesus' place (antichrist(s)). Vatican City (Which is its own nation BTW) have risen up to fulfill the role of the false prophet Regarding the man of lawlessness or antichrist, 2 Thessalonians 2:4 says “Who opposes and exalts himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sits in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.” The restrainer that the Apostle Paul was referring to in 2 Thessalonians was the Western Roman Emperor, who held back the Popes from taking power. Once the last Western Roman Emperor was removed from power in 476 AD, the Pope was given civil and ecclesiastic authority over Rome; healing the deadly head wound of the beast in Revelation 13, as they took the Emperors title of Pontifex Maximus, leader of the church and state. “We may according to the fullness of our power, dispose of the law and dispense above the law. Those whom the Pope of Rome doth separate, it is not a man that separates them but God. For the Pope holdeth place on earth, not simply of a man but of the true God.” (Source: “Decretals of Gregory IX,” Book 1, chapter 3.) Pope Pius V blasphemed, “The Pope and God are the same, so he has all power in Heaven and earth.” (Source: Pope Pius V, quoted in Barclay, Cities Petrus Bertanous Chapter XXVII: 218.) Pope Leo XIII declared, “We hold upon this earth the place of God Almighty.” (Source: Pope Leo XIII Encyclical Letter, June 20, 1894) The antichrist sea beast of Revelation points to the office of the papacy, the Popes of Rome, who controlled the Roman beast for 1,260 years, from 538-1798 AD. Daniel 7:25 says “And he shall speak great words against the most High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time.” The Popes of Rome spoke against Elohim and proclaimed to be God. They reigned for 1,260 years, from 538-1798 AD. during which they caused tens of millions of saints to be killed. The Pope’s title is Vicar of Christ, which in Latin is ‘Vicarius Filii Dei’, and equates numerically to the number 666
We know better now we must do better. To show our support of our sisters. They should be compensated for their hard labor. To capitalize on others hard labor isn't right. Thank you for sharing this video, my eyes are open.
@Business Insider how is it that you guys go make these documentaries about natives, their culture, practices and way of living, profit off of them, but NEVER include or HIGHLIGHT a link, website, payment information, etc.? It would be great to support these businesses so that they can continue to produce these fabulous products and make a living for themselves.
when cooking food, aromas are added to give it a good smell, you can do that to Shea butter, if u can't afford the East African SB. Get the west African version and mix it with, ether coconut oil, any oil, petroleum jelly, pure honey etc just experiment. I prefer the waxy SB. 😊. Some of the fruits are also not planted in WA.... Check Hamamat channel for the Ghana version as well.
I'm Kenyan and I know this is going to hurt my pockets a little since I just started using Ugandan shea butter, but they need to increase the price, especially when selling internationally. These hard working women deserve to profit more from it. I'm ashamed I didn't know about the limited supply and how much work it took to produce it.
the problem is that the middle man always earns the most, the ones that do all the hard work earn less ;-( to preserve the nature and keep it local which is best for them and the environment, the international demand should be keeot minimal..... most products are produced hugely but end up in rubbish when they reach abroad and the locals are left harmed for no good reason.
Fellow Kenyan here. This was so informative! I use the butter as well. Let's hope M7 is going to put some of that newly-discovered gold to good use and invest in modern farming and processing equipment so that these women can earn more.
The problem is the world n how it has formed in the market. The middle men always get the profit when really it should be that the original sellers HIRE the middle men n pay them little to sell instead.
Don’t forget they have competition with west African Shea butter which is abundant.
I agree it should be $75-80 a jar overseas. I think it’s also about preventing a war. Are they protected? What’s stopping a group from taking it away from them?
I’m sick of seeing all these people put in such hard work for an expensive product but not getting paid nearly as much as they should
*cough* capitalism *cough*
That’s what happens when you can’t use your brain
Cocoa, sugar cane, cotton, diamonds, gold shall I continue?????
@@gisellespringer ooh and you forgot oil too
? are you a little white girl lol
I want to thank you Business Insider for finally coming to my home village. Shea butter is a very nutritious oil and medicinal as well. I'm proud of you. Thanks for the good work
I just hope your people are paid fairly for this hard work.
Can you tell me if there is a brand or web site i can buy this? I want to purchase some for my mom but want my purchase to go to the communities and people more then some inport/export company.
@@tripsquared_greenworks It is basically made by indigenous women who have no websites or companies. It's sold locally in the market. However, arrangements can be made and have it shipped to you.
I would love to buy this straight from these women! I will definitely do some research to find out how to purchase this directly from them as opposed to giving my money to some POS corporation!
I wish you guys had a better regulatory government dealer.
Selling it to companies or local dealers prob yields very low income. Government should step in, and export it at better prices for a better profit to the workers. Africa is rich in resources , if govt steps in and manages exports . It can really boost the local economy.
African nations need to start leveraging such products when exporting. Increase the price for exports, they deserve it as well as the economy
Yes, and crash the market. Price it too high and only the lucky ones will be able to afford it. Retailers will pass additional costs to end users and consumers.
Cosmetics can be made out of dozens of oils. There's no leverage.
Hallelujah 🙌. Our part of the world getting coverage. Earlier today it was Kenya's black gold (coffee). Thanks business Insider for promoting our products. African products are rare-earth.
Do you know how we can buy directly from these women?
I would definitely like to see these women have a facility to do this work and make it easier on them but be able to sell it themselves to those markets that want it. That deforestation is a problem in all areas where Indigenous live. I wish them well and would love to buy shea butter directly from them.
Hi Joan! I'm a grants management professional working in Nairobi. If you're interested, we could partner and upscale the value chain from a social enterprise stand point. HMU.
@@kevinmuriuki550 How would u do that? Just interested,
@@kevinmuriuki550 is there a brand that profits the people and communities more then some business conglomeration?
Hi Joan, I work and come from the community where these women are producing this product , I will be delighted to connect you to them and be able to share Thier product with you
Yes @Ryan there is
Uganda's shea butter smells soo good, like honey mixed with something flowery. They truly deserve more.
I had no idea it smelt that way, that's so cool!! And yeah, totally agree with you. Nobody should work for free
How do you buy directly from them
I want some! Where can I order?!
How can we order directly from them please?
I'm your 500th liker here & bye.
Whoever chose the thumbnail definitely is a person of culture as well.
Bruh🤣
I was looking for this comment..
Bro
Exactly I'm going to tell this
This is my kingdom come
Love from India to our hard working African people.
We use both West and East African Shea. However, the East we use sparingly as it is more expensive but it melts faster and absorbs quicker. It is a great product and I am thankful for these ladies.
The raw form reminds me of something. I can't quite put my finger on it.
Its familiar to me too and too cant put my finger on it
It's very familiar 💀
I see it everyday but I cant remember
@@mayankprajapat4591 Yeah idk what it is but i have seen it before
It’s just killing me too….
In Uganda, the Shea trees grow more abundantly in the northern region. When I was in high school in the central region, an Acholi friend from the north used to bring a homemade appetizer made from Shea. He called it "moya". He described the tree from which the stuff was made but we had never heard of it. He loved that stuff. But it tasted awful to the rest of us, which was ok for him because it meant that he didn't have to share it with us.
It also grows in abundance in the northern region of west African countries like Nigeria and Ghana.
i used to hate moya while growing up......hahahhaah now i must ask my done to bring some from the village hahahhahaa
Looool..!
I wish I had some to give my father for his joint pain
As an Acholi I totally understand u.. it's just that we grow up eating it so it's delicious to us.. in the village it's even a meal in poverty stricken home.. it's melted by steaming then salt is added to it . Then u eat it as sauce with either boiled cassava.. potatoes.. even posho🤦🏿♀️😅 but cold pressed Shea butter isn't eaten
I love Shea Butter! Since using it, my skin has definitely benefited from it as I have a chronic condition that dries my skin. I never knew there was another type of Shea depending on which side of the African continent it is made in. I will gladly pay more to support the hard work that goes into making the butter. These ladies are making a difference in a lot of lives, and they deserve to be compensated!
yes, let's hope that by paying extra that those who cultivate them will see the difference in the price they collect at the market.
I too have dry skin issue , you can also try some herbs it works miraculously.
That's something totally new for me, I always used Ghanian Shea butter which is amazing, but I would like to know more about this Ugandan and Sudanese Shea butter, such an interesting topic, I love Africa and I'm proud to be African!
I'm Nigerian & I use the west Africa shea butter but after seeing this, definitely I must hunt for this Ugandan Shea Butter 😊😊😊
Yeah, definitely!
Facts.
me too
Is it available in Nigeria, where can I get
@@prajithk.p8369 its available in deesn
Kinda disgusting how the value of a product goes up so much once big corporations take it from the hands on workers who made it.
But yet thats what’s necessary to sell it so not disgusting
@@treygregory5360 No it's still pretty disgusting. These women should be the ones making the most money in this situation.
@@boingbong7348 they said the price increases after exporting it. That’s a huge fuel cost, vehicle cost, labor cost, marketing cost, retail overhead, packaging cost, etc, etc, etc, etc. I understand in a Utopian society everyone would get 100% and all. But you have to understand business. If the corporate side didn’t do their job, the ladies would never sell beyond their village. Think
@@treygregory5360 maybe it would be better if they didn’t sell much outside their Village though bc it sounds like they are over farming / running low on their resources. Also all the extra transport and packaging just creates waste / pollution. Is there really no way to grow these trees in other areas?
@@00st307-m sounds like they're not rly growing it at all. Tree farms can take a decade to reach production
This explains why their skin is so beautiful!!❤️❤️
Wow.
An episode that doesn't show the locals being exploited the hell out of. Actually awesome.
its happening alright, they just arent showing it
@@patrickormerod3472 it probably is. But this is the one time where they at least show that the company doing the harvesting and producing are actually being the primary benefitors. Went online to look up their product and I see that they at least show they're trying to do good.
Things seem to go A LOT better for producers when there's no bullsh*t middleman getting the lion's share of the product.
This happens when it isn't industrialised.
@@Matteus2109 yeah locals sell it for 12 market price is 53 lol.
In Dagestan, we have similar product, but we skip last step. We don't separate oil from the mass. We eat this mass and its called 'urbech'. We use mostly seeds of flax or apricot nuts for this. In finally for better taste we mix it with honey and ghee oil. Дагестан вперёд!!!!
OMG OMG! THIS IS FROM MY VILLAGE IN UGANDA. I HAD NO IDEA THE PRODUCT I GREW UP EATING WAS SO EXPENSIVE
I wish the narrators would take the time to learn how to properly pronounce our names the same way we struggle to learn theirs.
You should tell those hardworking women to charge the middle men more. Respect to them !
as a sudanese, I had no idea it was this hard to make shea butter.
Sud at nese nuts
Sudanese nuts!
Chocolate
RIght? I'd prolly have to mortgage my house for the east kind. LOL.
It's a wild world buddy.
Look at how lush and beautiful their skins are!
They don't eat fastfood maybe thats why? Not the Western diet
@@mushi475 maybe, but if it's a testament to their nilotica shea butter I must say they've got me x)
Finally, I saw an episode from my mother land. The pearl of Africa.
Gorgeous people and a beautiful culture ❤️
More like kindey stone
@@meerderheidsverslag1233 shut up
Proudly African I salute Children of African Soil❤️💯
Shea butter has antiinflammatory, antifungal, anti aging, antibacterial, antioxidant properties... It helps boost collagen production & promote cell regeneration.. It also reduce stretch marks, fine lines & wrinkles..
I love cold pressed shea butter🥰🥰 bt it’s mostly expensive 🥲🥲
since its easier to spread and absorbs quickly into the skin, which makes it more desirable in cosmetics, i think its only fair it doesnt come cheap
Agree I just brought 5 lbs for 65 USD. After testing I will be buying some more
@@troper1102 holy crap 5 pounds? do you bathe in it? (only kidding)
@@jordanearl5449 maybe but my daughter and me have Eczema and in the summer time we don't like heavy butters.
In cosmetics its mixed with other ingredients and packaged pretty. Its cousin is thicker, almost a soft hard paste but shaved thinly then held in the hand, body heat softens it to a useable 100% pure organic state and its far cheaper.
@@thebastardgift heat up a spoon and East African shea butter is easy to apply
I wish for the profit to go to these hard working people who supply the world with something precious!
Absolutely! 👏👏👏 they sure deserve it . There cultural knowledge and work so hard as little girls. ✝️
It wont . Sadly, these poor producers will be exploited
And it doesn’t really go to them. That’s Capitalism in a nutshell for ya.
Why can’t they sell it directly to consumers instead of buyers?
the expense is worth it if the money if passed on to it's actual harvestors, creators/curators...fact is most of the inflated price goes to the pockets of Loreal, P&G, Uniliver, etc....
Agreed.
I want to be able to like this more than once
Yeah, I can attest that this is not the price in Uganda. I buy a kg of high quality shea butter in Kampala for 9 USD. Most of the profit goes to companies abroad.
I like the ugandan shea butter. We always mix in our meals but i have never liked processing it. I find it so hectic but thanks to my mother who always does that.
Happy to see this, thank goodness I have a lot of people in EA who can get me this Uganda Shea butter. Watching from Nigeria
cold pressed is 100 % better, you keep the vitamins ,antioxidants and the amount of it , do not let you be told otherwise
Where would you purchase it?
Yeah of course it's better you're not burning everything out of it. These women would have their minds blown if they just had someone come with a welder and weld a bottle jack in place of their hand crank.
@@michaelf.2449ok?
Proud to watch a video about Uganda that is focusing on the bright side rather than always the dark stories about my motherland. Thank you Business Insider.
Btw Business Insider Uganda also has Black Castor Oil, how does it compare with the other Black Castor Oils from Jamaica, Haiti, etc? 😀😀
I immediately went to find some nilotica shea. I’m broke but my kid suffers from eczema and loves shea during flair ups, it’s one of the only products she’s willing to use when it’s in the inflamed, painful stage. But she dislikes how thick it is and how it sits on her skin so long before absorbing. I’m hoping this might be what she’s been wanting. Also I put an occlusive layer on ad a last step in my skin care evry night, bc I have dry skin normally and I’m using tretinoin. I have a feeling this will replace my normal balms.
nilotica soap and oil helped clear my baby's eczema completely. i would highly recommend getting a good quality product that is completely pure and hasnt been processed further
Well why don't you try virgin coconut oil or sesame seed oil , like half an hour to 15 min or so before having a bath , spread it on the skin, and use a gentle body shampoo to remove the excess 🙄, it's still cheaper than shea butter.
@@tempest031 we’ve used coconut oil since she was a baby, it’s just not thick enough. Like her fav product so far is when I made her balms/butters using shea or coco butter, and coconut oil but it’s such a pain to make. The Nilotica looks like the butters I make. Also she’s a teenager now and prone to teenage acne, and coconut oil doesn’t really work for her face where she’s been getting the worst of the eczema in recent years. I’ve read some people have a reaction to coconut oil that causes acne. coconut oil is great for when the flair ups flair ups on her hands and arms are past the red inflamed stage, and in the dry, scaly, itchy stage.
@@nancygitonga714 yeah k found some cold pressed Nilotica I’m going to try. It’s only 2 oz but it’s $9 so it’s a good tester. If it works I’ll buy the larger tub that’s a lot more expensive. Also I highly rec Shikai advanced therapy borage oil lotion. It’s wonderful for dryness and when your past the worst part of the eczema. It’s literally the only lotion my kid will use. I also have dry skin and I’ve never had lotion work as well as this one. They also make a borage oil soap made specifically for pole with skin conditions. It can be hard to find but Amazon has it. There is the normal borage lotion and it’s great too, especially in summer, but for the most extreme dryness, and for skin that’s recovering from an eczema flair up, I can’t rec the advanced therapy enough.
Shea butter isn't colloidal oatmeal. Use colloidal oatmeal
Shea butter is the best solution for all my skin issues I really love the relief I get from it. Maybe we should grow more of these amazing nuts.
This looks so good. I wish I could go to Africa just to get the authentic thing!
I love the sweet smell of Shea butter. Shea butter can be a good source of revenue for Africa. It has good percentage of oil in it.
Africa is a continent.Shea trees do not grow in all African countries
@@Me-xoxoz I know few countries in the African continent are home to Shea trees .Instead of naming them i said Africa.
This is what true Femenism looks like… such hardworking women should be our inspiration
I have used both Western and Nilotica shea butter I do prefer both. It’s hard to find the East African Shea Butter unless you know Ugandan who live buy you some on their return trip from home in the region where it’s produce. The women need to produce various products and sell the products online and towards tourists visiting and diaspora moving to country. I prefer buying brands made by the indigenous groups directly it supports their families and communities directly instead of through third party brand.
I am a Ugandan Canadian based in Toronto. I do have Uganda Shea Butter. Please let me know if you are in North America. Will certainly send you some. Thank you.
@@aunties5798 Do you have a website?
@@aunties5798 please website or something. I’m interested
Thank you for speaking the truth. Each is unique in it own way and has its own use. West African Shea butter is an actual BUTTER not just some semi liquid . I didn't like the way this whole video puts down the West African Shea butter
@zaezi189 The video isn't putting West african shea butter down whatsoever. If you have actually compared the two, you would realise there is a HuGE difference between the two. Most companies nowadays are looking for shea that easily melts into products which is east african shea butter. I used to buy West african shea butter, and it was still good. It just required a lot of patience and I had to melt it, whereas my South Sudanese shea doesn't need to be melted, so I prefer my country's one.
When u are to develop a community, u dont have to bring in external product or external help but instead you should build from what the community has and what it can produce locally. The people in northern Uganda are really suffering with poverty. This is a great opportunity and it is sustainable.
Blame all this to Museveni. As you've said, you don't have to bring external help.... In western Uganda, there's plenty of cattle keepers, our meat and milk are still consumed locally. The Govt hasn't helped farmers, for coffee u already know the Pinetti plan with Museveni. It's the same thing that happened to Vanilla farmers on central Uganda in the early 2000's. Did you hear about cotton growers and what happened to them? Man if you understand how M7 has caused poverty in Uganda you would wish he dies tomorrow
Our east african shea butter is incredible, it is smooth and my customers are always amazed by it. Thanks for sharing this!❤
When I heard "Shea Butter" I didnt really think of any variety whatsoever; though now I've clicked on the video I can learn it exists and there's a difference.
What I don't hear being said is how much of the sales do they get back for the hard work they put into making the butter? 3 weeks to complete a product means more work gets put into it, so it makes sense for the price to be up too with the quality being that nice.
And shea butter has been helpful for my skin problems but wow, what I get doesn't soak in that fast. It's more like the other version where you have to keep rubbing it, but I have figured out a way to thin it and it still works the same for moisturizing.
They get very little, they dont make more than 5 000ugx per day which is 1.2$ . That is why people in Uganda dont care for those trees. Reach people see big money in that buisnes but really locals wont get anything.
I microwave mine for 10 seconds and it works fine
Business Insider I need you to post links to businesses that sell these products! Now I gotta find East African Shea butter on my own
Try 3CayG. They are in Jacksonville but will ship to you.
Ok. Go find it on your damn own. They don’t NEED to do anything.
I love Shea butter and I try to support women organizations out of ghana and so should you ! 💯🙏🏻
Love it. I'm so disappointed they aren't getting what they deserve
The tree and its nuts looks similar to the indian mahua tree..
Mahua nuts r also used for cooking oil..
I think we should also try to make butter from it..
The tree and its nuts, man that screams sus
This is one the limited jobs where your hands get actually smoother with the more work you do haha! I wish carpentry worked like that
It could be worse - Like working with cement. Or sewage!
They should Charge More for their product !
Especially since demand greatly exceeds supply.
But people (labourers)won't be aware of demand and profit of this product and people in middle make profits fooling innocent people paying them few bucks
Off topic but I love the dresses they're wearing. So flowy yet air crosses so it doesn't make them too hot. Plus the colourful prints are so beautiful
I feel like traveling to Uganda just to see this lovely women's and then support them financially, even with the little I have I wouldn't mind to do that ❤️❤️❤️
wtf
@@Joeyy6 we don't waste time with garbage.
@@Noli_dstos bro, you're weird af
This butter looks soo good it might actually be able to give life to someone.
West african Shea is firmer when working with it. I used it in the US many of times by mixing it with Mango butter and other oils to help it absorb better in the skin. However, eastern shea is good in its own way, but it is to soft for some application that I make. I do like it, but I do blend it with other butters like mango or murumuru to make the final product semi firm. Both sheas actually has their uses. I only find that, one absorbs quickly and the other doesn't. I like and make a product where it is going to asorb a tad bit quicly in the skin and keeps a very light hygrated hair.
hello... i can supply you with ghana shea butter as welln
I love Shea.. Even if it's expensive I am still buying it because it is the only shampoo my daughter's like. Shea Moisture ❤️
Its amazing to see their hard work and efforts, and the beautiful product it turns into however although i do love this product i think that the price should still be higher. These women work very hard especially considering they do all of this without factories or heavy machine production.
look at their hand. you can tell that the shea butter had been making them smooth, shine and pretty. I have my respect to those hard working lady in west Africa.
Business Insider definitely playing the thumbnail game
I am here to read comments after watching thumbnail.
👆👆Opportunities don’t happen, you create them... make it up ⬆️⬆️
The world we live in is sooooo different from the world they live in. Can y’all imagine doing this on a daily basis? I mean their strength and diligence is impeccable 💪🏾.
That thumbnail tho! ☠️☠️
I pray these women receive fair wages for their hard work. The price of the oil should be increased. I never knew what cold pressed oil was, until this video. I love Shea, Black seed and Coconut oils!!!
They will
THIS IS MY KINGDOM COME
THIS IS MY KINGDOM COME
THIS IS MY KINGDOM COME
I wish I could buy from them directly. Amazing women.
As a west African I can't believe I've never known of this
Uganda is such a beautiful place.
Such a shame that the villagers only receive a fraction of the profits. Such hard work.
they should call it Ugandan butter. It gives it more of a presence and also let us know that there are valuable resources in africa, and they deserve more respect and fair value of the hardwork. Not exploitation
Thanks for uploading this content. I used to work part time in a store in UAE. A customer asked for a soap with Shea butter as main ingredient. But we had that particular brands papaya and lemon flavored soaps. And the customer showed us the photo of the Shea butter flavoured soap. We tried hard to get it and the efforts were in vain. It wasn't available in Amazon either at that time. Now i know why the hell that particular soap was damn hard to get.
i can't be the only who saw the thumbnail and thought....
It's crazy how they all have perfect skin while working under the sun day after day
Men of culture we meet again , the thumbnail speaks it all.
The fact that they were able to discover and how to extract the oil from the nuts, is mind blowing.
How? You act like people haven't been making extracts for thousands of years.
@@P0k3D0nd3M4cG Yeah, well-meaning but pretty patronising comment.
Teeth.
@@DanBrown96 yep, these people figured out that if you crush something and squeeze it stuff comes out... That's like basically the same with every other plant 🤣
Yeah I agree with you. They're not amazing for figuring that out they're amazing for working with what little they have.
I feel that you meant well, but your comment really sounds like a backhanded compliment.
Came here for the comments referring to a similar looking substance...yup. not disappointed 😂
They've been using the machine since 1997 yet it's still in great condition, amazing
It looks like a simple screw press, I don't see much that could break.
@@psirvent8 I mean besides that it still works, it is still clean and well maintained, most food equipment that you see nowadays wear off in just a couple of years
that's what i thought too loool that machine is still in mint conditon as it was first purched
Lovely video. I have a lot of respect for these hardworking ladies. I use Baraka butter - all types in my cosmetic making and their produts are fabulous. If cosmetic industry supports these countries by sharing theor profits with these ladies it will be heartwarming feeling of justice. I, in my own little way help my purchasing their products to make my pain meds and other cosmetics. Love their Shea , cocoa butter and Kombo butter. Thanks to all the lovely ladies who help in their own way to keep other ladies around the eorld occupied and helping diectly and indirectly make DIY poducts. I dont sell my poducts. IMake them ahead every year and distribute it to my family and friends.
That thumbnail though
0:16 everything reminds me of him
This can prevent hiv but not monkey pox because it can seal the tear immidietly
You mean 0:16 ?
👆👆Opportunities don’t happen, you create them... make it up ⬆️⬆️
They need to plant more Nilotica Shea Trees!!!
They don't grow when planted. People have tried but it only grows wild.
@@eliazali_4200 Oh That's not good. How do these trees reproduce??? May e Scientists and Botanists can research a way to grow them!!! Yes? By the way...Thank you for your reply🙂
@@damianlopez7630 We already have shea nuts on our bodies. Two of them
that does not work for most native east African plants. the plants only grow wild, if you try replanting them they don't grow
@@fandroid6491 what do you mean,it is on our body???
Southern Africa is just so different from rest of Africa. We simply generally don't have things which are common in the rest of Africa eg Shea nut, cassava, palm trees in large numbers, till recently moringa was unheard of etc.
Wonder why
@@GreaterEthio It's weird. I'm 50 now I've never seen or eaten cassava in my whole life because in Zimbabwe it's unknown. Yet cassava is a staple in Nigeria etc. I've never seen yams either. Never mind kola nuts etc. All these things we know of from books and TV. We don't have palm oil and many other things
Shea butter is my favorite scent! Didn't know this is how complicated it is produced
So glad to see you reach my homeland/ people" business insider!!
One like for the thumbnail.
Worth it though. My skin and my hair love it!
We always want cheap items but the process of doing it is hard labour
Thank god I don’t do bargains
It takes time and sweat to get something done
U pay what u ask for
Most part of your money goes to resellers/Middleman, they are still payed fraction of what you bought it for!
i love how it feels on my face and hair its just really refreshing
Thank You Insider for showing us how Human Labor still important
Wonderful video full of valuable insights into this special commodity and the inspiring people that produce it. Thank you for this enlightening video.
One of my favorite products from moisturizing i’ve been using this product ever says I was 10 years old now and 36 and I still purchase it which shows it is a great product
How do you buy it
Came for the thumbnail, stayed for the thumbnail.
The thumbnail looks like my usual Friday night
Shea butter is a miracle! Amazing.
And that is why the African people are the most beautiful in the world! Although I'm a white woman born & raised in south Louisiana, I was blessed to have been raised by a beautiful Creole woman as the only white child (other than my 2 brothers) in a community of African American/ Creole people. She always told me "Baby black don't crack & that's a fact" & boy was she ever right! I miss the smells of Shea butter/ Coconut oil/ Softee/ Blue Magic/ Pink Moisturizer & more! My beautiful children are half African American/ Creole & I dreamed of them having that beautiful kinky coily hair as I was taught to do many beautiful African styles as a younger woman but they both have very thick wavy Caucasian hair... Still love it tho!
This was such a great episode!
Repent and follow Jesus my friend! Repenting doesn't mean confessing your sins to others, but to stop doing them altogether. Belief in Messiah alone is not enough to get you into heaven - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36). Contemplate how the Roman empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13. Revelation 17 confirms that it is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years to accomplish the religion of the Israelites C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate though because you can start a relationship with God and have proof. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life. - Revelation 3:20
Revelation has been unfolding since Jesus died. The Popes have claimed to be equal to God and set themselves in Jesus' place (antichrist(s)). Vatican City (Which is its own nation BTW) have risen up to fulfill the role of the false prophet
Regarding the man of lawlessness or antichrist, 2 Thessalonians 2:4 says “Who opposes and exalts himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sits in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God.” The restrainer that the Apostle Paul was referring to in 2 Thessalonians was the Western Roman Emperor, who held back the Popes from taking power. Once the last Western Roman Emperor was removed from power in 476 AD, the Pope was given civil and ecclesiastic authority over Rome; healing the deadly head wound of the beast in Revelation 13, as they took the Emperors title of Pontifex Maximus, leader of the church and state.
“We may according to the fullness of our power, dispose of the law and dispense above the law. Those whom the Pope of Rome doth separate, it is not a man that separates them but God. For the Pope holdeth place on earth, not simply of a man but of the true God.” (Source: “Decretals of Gregory IX,” Book 1, chapter 3.)
Pope Pius V blasphemed, “The Pope and God are the same, so he has all power in Heaven and earth.” (Source: Pope Pius V, quoted in Barclay, Cities Petrus Bertanous Chapter XXVII: 218.)
Pope Leo XIII declared, “We hold upon this earth the place of God Almighty.” (Source: Pope Leo XIII Encyclical Letter, June 20, 1894)
The antichrist sea beast of Revelation points to the office of the papacy, the Popes of Rome, who controlled the Roman beast for 1,260 years, from 538-1798 AD.
Daniel 7:25 says “And he shall speak great words against the most High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time.” The Popes of Rome spoke against Elohim and proclaimed to be God. They reigned for 1,260 years, from 538-1798 AD. during which they caused tens of millions of saints to be killed.
The Pope’s title is Vicar of Christ, which in Latin is ‘Vicarius Filii Dei’, and equates numerically to the number 666
I'm just impressed that I could understand what the woman was saying in Acholi language. It's almost similar to Dholuo. 😂
Nilotes are nilotes everywhere..😃 Bantu languages are also similar..
"This is my kingdom come, This is my kingdom come"
I make this stuff every day!
We know better now we must do better. To show our support of our sisters. They should be compensated for their hard labor.
To capitalize on others hard labor isn't right.
Thank you for sharing this video, my eyes are open.
anyone else click on this video just bc of the thumbnail?
I dead appreciate these vids insider makes its very enlightening
@Business Insider how is it that you guys go make these documentaries about natives, their culture, practices and way of living, profit off of them, but NEVER include or HIGHLIGHT a link, website, payment information, etc.? It would be great to support these businesses so that they can continue to produce these fabulous products and make a living for themselves.
I want to buy some.
^^^^ this.
when cooking food, aromas are added to give it a good smell, you can do that to Shea butter, if u can't afford the East African SB. Get the west African version and mix it with, ether coconut oil, any oil, petroleum jelly, pure honey etc just experiment. I prefer the waxy SB. 😊. Some of the fruits are also not planted in WA.... Check Hamamat channel for the Ghana version as well.
Power of thumbnail😎😎😎😎😎😎😎