Ahead of International Women's Day, the FNE Salutes the Decisive Commitment of its Female Collaborators
By La Rédaction · Port-au-Prince · · 3 min read · Updated 24 April 2026
Translated from French — AI-assisted and reviewed by the editorial team. The French version is authoritative. Read the original · About our translation policy

As International Women's Day approaches, the National Education Fund (FNE) has chosen to mark this universally significant moment with a gesture of recognition towards the women who, through their daily commitment, actively contribute to the smooth functioning and influence of the institution.
Far from symbolic tributes or perfunctory gestures, this initiative highlights a tangible reality: at the FNE, women are not mere silhouettes in the administrative landscape. They do not constitute a decorative presence; they represent a true force of labor, intelligence, and commitment in the service of education. As full-fledged participants in public action, these committed professionals dedicate their skills and steadfastness to the educational mission carried out by the institution.
On this occasion, the Director General, Mr. Elysé COLAGENE, emphatically praised the quality of the work accomplished by these women within the organization. Through this gesture of attention, he wished to publicly acknowledge the real and constant contribution they provide in conducting activities and advancing the educational mission pursued by the FNE. Behind every file processed, every action undertaken, every project supported, there is often the discreet but essential involvement of professionals who make a sense of duty a true work ethic, he suggested.
In the same spirit, the Director General highlighted their high sense of responsibility, their professionalism, and the rigor with which they carry out their daily duties. According to him, this contribution is not measured solely by the tasks performed, but also through the spirit of dedication and professional conscientiousness that accompanies each of their actions.
These qualities, within the internal functioning of the FNE, constitute discreet but essential pillars for the advancement of the institution's objectives in favor of education in Haiti. From this perspective, Mr. Colagène recalled that the effectiveness of a public structure often relies on constant commitments, sometimes not very visible, but always decisive.
In this regard, the presence and involvement of women within the FNE reflect a work dynamic where competence, discipline, and a sense of public service combine daily to advance educational action.
This moment of recognition thus falls within a clear objective: to reiterate that the contribution of women to the development of public organizations is neither accessory nor marginal. It is structural. It is decisive.
Concurrently, the women concerned welcomed this initiative with satisfaction marked by sobriety and dignity. Not as an attempt to attribute a value they already possess, but as a sign that their commitment, professionalism, and the quality of their contribution are recognized at their true worth.



