Supporting the families of fallen Rangers who protected Virunga National Park

Through education, healthcare, and access to sustainable livelihoods, the fund ensures that families are supported with dignity — and that the mission their loved ones stood for continues.

Standing with Rangers’ Families

The Fallen Rangers Fund provides long-term support to the widows and children of Virunga Rangers who have lost their lives in the line of duty.

Since Virunga was established as a national park in 1925, more than 200 Rangers have been killed while protecting the Park’s wildlife, habitats, and neighbouring communities. Before the Fund was in place, widows received little to no financial support, with their families often becoming severely impoverished.

In 2007, Park management began identifying the widows and families of fallen Rangers, reaching back to those affected since the start of the regional conflict in 1991. Today, when a Ranger is killed, a dedicated fund is immediately set up, and all donations are directed to the Ranger’s widow.

During the first six months, the Park continues to pay the Ranger’s full salary. After this period, the widow receives a pension to help provide stability as the family adjusts to life after loss. Widows and their children also receive access to medical care and schooling through Park facilities.

Widows Workshop, Rumangabo

As well as financial support, Virunga endeavors to provide young widows with opportunities for personal development via work-based training within Virunga’s various departments.

Having taken advantage of the scheme, which aims to empower vulnerable women, one electrical engineering graduate now works for Virunga Energies, supplying sustainably produced power to homes and businesses across the region. There are four women who have been trained as chocolatiers in the Virunga Origins chocolate factory, with a further two being equipped with the knowhow for marketing the end product in Goma.

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