by AOEF | Sep 29, 2022 | Breakfast on the Nile Newsletter
Express yourself in a U.S.-Africa Cultural Exchange! Students and young adults in the U.S. and Africa are invited to contribute short essays on one of five topics. Topics were selected by youth leaders on both continents. Open to contributors ages 14-24, AOEF’s...
by AOEF | Jun 21, 2022 | Breakfast on the Nile Newsletter
AOEF’s From Leadership to Legacy leadership curriculum was designed and developed with African youth leaders in mind. Our cohort of six youth leaders in Africa worked with AOEF mentors to explore leadership, complete weekly assignments, tap other students to...
by AOEF | Jun 19, 2022 | Breakfast on the Nile Newsletter
The Chair position of AOEF’s Youth Advisory Council was recently awarded to Eno Okpo. A staunch advocate for education with incredibly keen business and leadership insights, Eno has served AOEF’s Youth Advisory Council faithfully for the past two years....
by AOEF | Jun 19, 2022 | Breakfast on the Nile Newsletter
An advocate for education, Damali Birungi volunteered with us and took the lead role in reviewing and suggesting edits for Mercy’s Magnificent Dreams. She helped ensure the words, sentence structure and concepts in our story would be familiar to and resonate...
by AOEF | Jun 19, 2022 | Breakfast on the Nile Newsletter
“Got-Rateng” is a Luo word that translates to the “Black Hill”. The school is neither located near a Hill nor is it Black in color to be clear. Got-Rateng is the school I was transferred to when I started performing poorly. My dad thought it...
by AOEF | Sep 30, 2021 | Breakfast on the Nile Newsletter
I was born preterm weighing just 2kg and all the odds were stacked against me medically, including the ability to read and write even if I should survive. Defying every medical diagnosis, I walked and ran, grew faster than my mates at the age of 7 months. My father...