Eczema will drive a kid crazy. Few know this better than Amina, whose son and daughter were both splotched with angry, scarlet rashes during childhood. This frustration is playing out in homes across the Middle East, where a 2016 study found that an increasing number of young people battle eczema. Twenty-three percent of children suffer from the skin disease in Qatar alone.
In 2000, Amina could not find a soap that would soothe rather than further irritate her daughter’s condition. Mainstream brands used harmful chemicals. Locally produced, olive oil-based soaps existed, but they varied in quality.
A typical parent would return, exasperated, to a dermatologist. But Amina went into a makeshift workshop at her sprawling olive farm outside Jerash, Jordan.
“I thought to myself that, if all of these traditional societies can make olive oil-based soap, it can’t be that difficult,” she recalls. Amina is an artist, trained in Florence — an enviable skill set, but a far cry from having studied pharmacology. Nevertheless, she started tinkering with different recipes, eventually striking on a solution for her eczema-ridden daughter.
Amina’s self-taught craft has flourished since she made that first bar of organic soap, 18 years ago. Two years on, when her son suffered from severe eczema due to food allergies, Mango went straight back to the workshop. She used aloe vera grown on her property to develop new soothing cream products for her son, which succeeded once again in knocking eczema on the head.
“Basically, that is how the story started — me trying to find a solution for my children,” she reflects.
Turning professional:
In 2004, Amina built a factory for her new business — Amina’s Natural Skincare. The company’s product range expanded to the current total of 28 different skin cleansers, hydrating oils, and moisturizing creams.
Three years ago, Amina’s Natural Skincare received organic certification from COSMOS, an EU-based, non-profit association that sets requirements for organic and/or natural cosmetic products. According to Amina, while Jordan has increasingly embraced the concept of organic farming, her business is the first Jordanian manufacturer to receive the certification.