They Laughed When He Tried to Get Arrested for Eating Chocolate...
In 2003, a journalist named Teun van de Keuken exposed a child slavery scandal that global giants called "untraceable." He didn't just report it—he built Tony’s Chocolonely to prove them wrong.
Most hair care brands source Batana and Shea the same way—from anonymous global piles where exploitation is baked into the price. We built Raíz Heritage because we refuse to accept "I don't know" as an answer.
"If a brand can't answer the hard questions, they have a marketing department—not an ethical supply chain."
"Give Me Five Minutes and I'll Show You the Hidden Scandal in Your Hair Care Routine"
You're reading the label on your favorite "natural" hair oil. It says: "Ethically sourced." "Sustainably harvested." "Fair trade."
Feels good, right? Now let me ask you something...
Do you know which village that shea butter came from?
Can you name a single woman who harvested it?
Do you know how much she earned?
Could she afford to send her children to school on what your brand paid her?
Of course you don't. The brand doesn't tell you. And there's a reason for that.
"We Asked Our Supplier"
"We asked our supplier if there were any problems. They said no. We didn't look any further."
"We Have a Certificate"
"We paid for a Fair Trade certification that audits once every three years. What happens the other 1,094 days? No idea."
"We Source from a Region"
"We source from West Africa. That counts as transparency, right?"
"We have no clue who harvested this, what they earned, or whether their children went hungry while they worked. But the words 'ethically sourced' test well with focus groups, so here we are."
Likely harvested by women in Northern Ghana earning less than $2 per day—below the international poverty line.
Probably extracted by Indigenous Miskito communities in Honduras, paid starvation wages by middlemen who pocket the markup.
Sourced from untraceable commodity markets where labor conditions range from "exploitative" to "we literally have no idea."
And nobody's talking about it. Why? Because chocolate gets headlines. Cocoa slavery is on 60 Minutes. But your shampoo? Nobody's making documentaries about that.
"Who Else Wants Proof That Ethical Beauty Is Possible?"
Here's what Tony's Chocolonely proved with chocolate:
But it requires doing five things most companies refuse to do. Tony's didn't invent these principles. They're common sense. But in an industry built on exploitation, common sense is revolutionary.
The Raíz Heritage Charter
Here is the model we are adopting for the future of hair care...
The Beauty Industry Buys from "The Pile." We Buy from People.
Most luxury brands source from "the pile"—unmarked silos where botanical oils from a thousand different villages are mixed together. In that mix, identity is lost, exploitation is hidden, and quality is averaged out. If they can't tell you exactly who pressed the oil, they can't tell you what's really in it.
Batana Provenance
- 📍 Miskito Heritage Co-op
- 📍 Brus Laguna, Honduras
- 📍 42 Participating Homes
- 📍 Hand-Pressed Ojon
Shea Provenance
- 📍 Pagung-Ba Women’s Group
- 📍 Tamale, Northern Ghana
- 📍 112 Women Harvesters
- 📍 Traditional Hand-Kneaded
Jojoba Provenance
- 📍 Desert Bloom Partners
- 📍 Negev Arid Lands
- 📍 Regenerative Farmstead
- 📍 First Cold Press
The Proof is in the Batch Code
Every bottle of Raíz Heritage carries a unique ID. It is your key to our transparency vault. Scan it to unlock:
If we can't trace every drop back to the soil, we don't bottle it.
Our Integrity Audit: 2026 Progress
Direct-from-village partnership since launch.
Currently phasing out the final 15% of regional intermediaries.
Migrating to 100% direct-farm contracts by Q1 2027.
Transparency isn't a destination—it's a continuous, radical pursuit.
How a Widow with Seven Children Tripled Her Annual Income
Meet Amina. A shea harvester in Northern Ghana. For years, she walked three hours each way to gather nuts for a global market that paid her $400 a year. $400 for 12 months of labor. At Raíz Heritage, we don't call that "market rate"—we call it a market failure.
The Industry Standard ($400/yr)
- ✦ Oldest daughter withdrawn from school to work
- ✦ Single-meal days during "The Hunger Gap"
- ✦ Structural instability in family housing
- ✦ Zero liquidity for medical emergencies
The Raíz Living Income ($1,200/yr)
- ✦ All seven children enrolled in secondary school
- ✦ Nutritional security year-round
- ✦ Solar power and roof reinforcements installed
- ✦ Active savings in the community credit union
Our Pricing Ledger: Market vs. Reality
| Ingredient | Standard Rate | Living Target | Raíz Current | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shea Nuts (Ghana) | $0.50/kg | $1.25/kg | $1.15/kg | 92% |
| Batana (Honduras) | $18.00/L | $32.00/L | $32.00/L | 100% |
| Jojoba Oil | $12.00/kg | $22.00/kg | $18.50/kg | 84% |
Radical Transparency: Where We Stand Today.
Batana: 100% Target Met. Fully decoupled from volatile market rates.
Shea: 92% Target. Scheduled for 100% parity by Q2 2027.
Jojoba: 84% Target. Working toward full living income by 2028.
We are founder-led and self-funded. We don't have billion-dollar reserves to fix a broken global system overnight. Instead, we use a Phased Escalation Model: Year 1 focus is a 50% premium; Year 2 is 75%; Year 3 is the full Living Income. You can audit our progress and view our methodology through our inquiry portal.
View Our Full Living Income RoadmapHow to Build Trust When the Industry Has Only Offered Exploitation
Individual harvesters operate with zero leverage. When a middleman dictates a price, a woman with a family to support has no choice but to accept. At Raíz Heritage, we believe collective bargaining is the only path from coercion to commerce.
We Don’t Just Source From Cooperatives—We Architect Them.
Executive Training
Financial management, transparent record-keeping, and high-stakes contract negotiation protocols.
Infrastructure
Direct funding for solar dryers, motorized oil crushers, and climate-controlled storage facilities.
Internal Capital
Establishing community-led savings and loan programs that provide families with emergency liquidity.
Female Leadership
Mentorship programs designed to train women to manage the business, not just provide the labor.
The Goal: Economic Resilience Over Dependency
Our success is measured by how strong these cooperatives are if we ever left. We invest so that every partner can:
- Negotiate with any global buyer.
- Access institutional bank credit.
- Pool resources for industrial equipment.
- Create high-value local jobs for the next generation.
Why We Sign 5-Year Contracts While the Industry Works Season-to-Season
Imagine running an enterprise where you have no idea if you’ll have a single client next quarter. You cannot take out a loan, you cannot invest in your land, and you cannot secure your family's future. This volatility is the status quo for most harvesters. Raíz Heritage operates on a different timeline.
Our Contractual Commitments:
Tripled Capacity
The Pagung-Ba Collective used our multi-year contract as collateral to secure a bank loan for motorized crushers. Production speed has increased by 300% without increasing manual labor.
Generational Reforestation
Partners in Honduras have planted 500 new Batana palms. They did this because they have a guaranteed buyer for the next decade—not just the next month.
Education Stability
Because income is now a predictable asset, harvesters are enrolling children in secondary education at record rates, knowing the fees are secured for years to come.
The Bad Harvest Protocol
When drought or storms destroy a crop, most brands vanish to find cheaper suppliers elsewhere. We do not bail. If a cooperative loses 50% of its yield, we maintain the contract, pay the agreed premium on what remains, and work together on soil recovery. We are partners in the risk, not just the reward.
How to Double Income Without Raising Prices
Fair pricing is only half of the equation. Even at $100 per kilo, a harvester stays in poverty if their yield is decimated by primitive tools or climate spoilage. At Raíz Heritage, we treat productivity as a human right. Here is the math of impact:
$1.00 × 500kg = $500
$1.00 × 1,200kg = $1,200
Shea Harvesters (Ghana)
- Eliminating labor-intensive stone-grinding.
- Scaling beyond low-yield wild tree cycles.
- Mitigating unpredictable West African rainfall.
Batana Producers (Honduras)
- Replacing inefficient open-fire processing.
- Solving the "Scattered Wild Palm" harvest gap.
- Building resilience against hurricane vulnerability.
Agricultural Training
64% Avg. Yield IncreaseImplementing post-harvest handling protocols to eliminate oil spoilage and maximize raw potency.
Processing Infrastructure
3x Faster ExtractionDeploying motorized crushers and solar dryers to move from "survival labor" to luxury production.
Climate Adaptation Fund
2,450 Trees PlantedFunding pest-resistant seedlings and agroforestry education to secure the next 50 years of harvest.
The Baseline (2022)
Yield: 600kg/member Price: $0.50/kg$300/Year
The Compound Effect (2025)
Yield: 1,100kg (+83%) Price: $1.10/kg (+120%)$1,210/Year
403% Net Income Increase"At 60 Miles an Hour, the Loudest Noise in This Rolls-Royce Comes from the Electric Clock"
When You Build Quality, the Data Speaks for Itself
Transparency is not a marketing tactic—it is our operational standard. Most brands hide their supply chain because the numbers are uncomfortable. We publish ours because we are proud of the impact.
Households earning sustainable income through direct Raíz partnerships.
Total paid in 2025 above standard global commodity market rates.
Direct funding for cooperative equipment and climate-resilience training.
Verified direct sourcing. Goal: 100% Traceability by December 2026.
Multi-year partnerships providing financial security for our harvesters.
Average increase in production quality for trained cooperative members.
Native saplings planted and wild populations preserved via agroforestry.
Percentage of partner cooperatives managed by women-led boards.
Global Origin Network
Explore the communities behind the ingredients.
*Internal audit data refreshed monthly to ensure total accuracy.
Data Last Verified: March 2026The End of "Take Our Word For It"
Every Batch Has a Story. Unlock Yours.
Most brands hide behind vague "ethical" labels. At Raíz Heritage, we give you the receipts. From the coordinates of the harvest to the families your purchase supported—traceability is now standard.
Locate the unique batch code printed on the bottom of your bottle. Enter it below to verify your oil’s origin.
Batch code not recognized. Please check the code on your bottle and try again.
Preview: Real-Time Batch Data
RH-BA-2025-0347
Product: Raw Batana Oil (Miskito Origin)
We’re on a Journey. We Haven't Arrived Yet.
Most brands only share their wins. We share our challenges—because transparency without honesty is just propaganda. Real systemic change is messy, but it’s happening.
The Living Income Gap
Why it exists: Sustainable growth must be stable. If we over-promise during a surge and cannot sustain payments during a lean quarter, we destabilize the very families we protect.
- 2025 Status 15% Premium Over Market
- 2026 Target 30% Premium Over Market
- 2027 Target 100% Living Income Achieved
Direct-Source Traceability
The Roadblock: You cannot "email" your way into the trust of a remote community. Building direct cooperative relationships takes years of physical presence. Some current jojoba suppliers remain intermediaries while we build our own network.
Commitment: 100% Direct Traceability by December 2027.
Climate Yield Adaptation
Our partners in Northern Ghana face declining wild tree populations. This year, some harvesters earned 18% less—not because of our pricing, but because nature provided less yield.
"The truth: We cannot outrun climate change alone. We are doing our part, but it is a race against time."
Want to hold us accountable? Submit a Transparency Inquiry.
Our Secret? We Invite People to Prove We're Full of Sh*t
Most brands hate auditors. We pay them to tear our supply chain apart. Because if we are lying, you deserve to know. And if we're not, the auditors prove it for us.
📋 Independent Supply Chain Audit
Auditor: Global Traceability Partners (GTP)
Last Audit: November 2025
Scope: Labor conditions, pricing fairness, and community fund disbursement.
👂 Harvester Feedback Loop
We hire independent facilitators (not employees) so harvesters speak freely. Here is our 2025 Scorecard:
Verified Status
Third-party certifiers verify claims independently. They aren’t perfect, but they’re better than "trust us."
Fair Trade
AchievedB-Corporation
In ProcessUSDA Organic
VerifiedRainforest Alliance
2027 Target*Certification logos represent our commitment to global accountability standards and independent supply chain verification.
To Brands Who Want to Stop Lying About Ethics Someday
Tony's Chocolonely did something almost no company does: They published their entire ethical sourcing model and invited competitors to copy it.
Why? Because ending slavery matters more than protecting market share. If every chocolate company adopted Tony's model tomorrow, Tony's wouldn't dominate. But cocoa slavery would end.
That is the goal. Not brand supremacy—systemic change. We are doing the same for the luxury hair care industry.
We are building a bridge to Honduras that any brand can walk across, provided they pay the price of dignity.
What We Share:
- Our direct supplier network contact list
- Living Income Reference Price calculations
- Traceability & Batch-tracking templates
- Fair partnership contract templates
- Audit protocols & certification roadmaps
- Lessons learned (Transparent Failures)
The Mission Over the Market
"If we're the only brand doing this, we're just a niche. If 50 brands do this, we shift the industry. And when the industry shifts, harvesters win."
THAT IS THE ONLY MISSION THAT MATTERS.
Who has joined the Open Chain so far?
Will your brand be the first to choose radical transparency?
Direct Inquiry: Transparency & Partnership Program
True Cost Disclosure
What Everybody Ought to Know About the True Cost of Hair Care
Poverty wages result in cheap products. Living income results in higher prices. There is no ethical shortcut to quality.
Where Your $100 Goes
(Raíz Heritage System)
Where Your $100 Goes
(Typical Natural Brand)
Notice what's missing on the right? Direct investment in the women who harvest.
If another brand offers Batana or Shea for significantly less, ask them to publish their pricing audit like we just did. If they won’t, you now know why it’s "cheaper."
"But I Can't Afford Premium Hair Care—Does That Make Me a Bad Person?"
Absolutely not. Financial barriers affect consumers as much as they affect harvesters. We respect that reality.
- If you can afford ethical products: Please choose them. Your purchase is a direct vote for a world where dignity is a requirement, not a luxury.
- If you can't right now: We understand. But don't let brands off the hook. Demand transparency from every company you buy from.
- Our goal: To make ethical sourcing the industry standard so that scale eventually brings prices down for everyone—without sacrificing the harvester.
Our products are not "marked up." They are the true cost of dignity.
Request Full Pricing AuditAnnual Release
The Impact
Audit
SUPPLY CHAIN REPORT
Accountability Protocol
How to Build Trust—Show Your Work
Every year, we publish a comprehensive impact report. This is not a glossy brochure with cherry-picked wins, but a real audit. We include the mistakes, the supply chain bottlenecks, and the stuff that makes us look human.
Common Inquiries
Transparent Answers to Hard Questions
Fair question. Scrutiny is the only way to keep the industry honest. Here is how you verify us:
- Third-party audits: We publish independent reports to verify our supply chain claims.
- Batch traceability: Every bottle links back to the actual cooperative in Honduras.
- Open financials: We provide transparency on how much actually goes back to the harvesters.
We are inviting scrutiny, not hiding from it. We believe the burden of proof should be on the brand, not the customer.
Living income isn't subjective—it's math. We follow international methodologies that calculate the actual cost of a decent life—food, housing, healthcare, and education—adjusted for household size in the specific regions we source from.
We are saying that the commodity markets most brands source from have documented poverty wages. Without audits and direct relationships, you simply can't prove otherwise. We choose to build a bridge directly to the source to ensure dignity is part of the price.
We follow a strict "Informed Consent" process. We explain exactly how photos and stories will be used, offer the choice of anonymity, and ensure harvesters are compensated for their time and contribution to the brand story.
The test of an ethical partnership is: "Are you building capacity or dependency?" We invest in infrastructure that the cooperatives own. If we close tomorrow, they remain stronger and more independent than when we started.

