Sisters From The States Flip The Script, Bring Sweetness Back To The Motherland
These Dominican queens ain't just chasing clout, they building generational wealth and uplifting the block back home.

Aight, so check it. You got Erika and Janett Liriano, two sisters raised in Queens, straight outta the Dominican diaspora. They ain't your average trust fund babies. Nah, these women hustled, climbed the corporate ladder, the whole nine. But something felt off, ya dig?
They ain't forget where they came from. Their parents, OG immigrants, instilled in them the hustle and the importance of giving back. One family gathering, a taste of that authentic Dominican cacao and coffee, and BOOM, inspiration hit harder than a 808. They said, "We gotta do something for our people."
Dominican Republic, right? Land of sunshine, beaches, and world-class cacao. But here's the messed up part: they grow 60% of the world's organic cacao, but the real money? That's going to them European countries and back to the States. The farmers, the ones breaking their backs in the fields, they barely scraping by. Sounds familiar, don't it?
These sisters saw the game and decided to change it. They packed up their bags, left their cushy jobs, and headed back to the DR to start Inaru, a chocolate company that puts the power back in the hands of the people.
They went straight to the source, linking up with farmers, seeing how the game really goes. And what they found? Same old story: middle men playing dirty, lowballing prices, delaying payments, straight robbing the farmers blind. These cats been getting played for too long.
Inaru is tryna flip the script. They cutting out the middleman, paying fair prices, and empowering farmers to take control of their own destiny. They building a sustainable business that benefits the entire community, not just some fat cats sitting in a skyscraper.
This ain't just about chocolate, though. It's about reclaiming what's rightfully ours. It's about showing the world that we can build our own empires, on our own terms. It's about generational wealth, community upliftment, and taking pride in our roots.
But let's keep it 100: it ain't gonna be easy. The system is rigged, and the corporations ain't gonna give up their power without a fight. These sisters gonna need our support, our voices, our dollars. We gotta show them that we got their back.
This ain't just a feel-good story, it's a call to action. We gotta support businesses that are doing it right, that are putting people over profits, that are building a better future for our communities. Let's put some respek on Inaru's name and show the world what we capable of.

