Tag Archives: happiness monyo

Grace & Happiness: Wishing to Meet Us Someday

Grace and Happiness in Tanzania this June

Grace and Happiness write to us shortly after their American visitors left Arusha, Tanzania, where they saw the Kisa Project in action [here are photos]. AfricAid is planning the trip again in 2012…maybe some of us will be able to go! In the meantime, Grace & Happiness are very loving, but seem a little shy in their letters –what stories do you want them to tell you about their lives? Ask them questions in the comments!

Grace writes:

Thanks for the concern [Grace was ill a few months ago], am doing well now. Am so happy to receive your book plus being visited by Ashely and her family…also there were many speakers from USA who inspired us…I wish that one day you will come…hope you had a nice concert
I wish you marvelous time
lots of love,says Grace

Happiness writes:

hi..well i was sick for some time but am okay now..
How is everything there?here things are alright we are about to close for 2weeks holiday and the coming exams so we are busy..i personaly enjoyed the time with Ashley and the guests…and i was inspired by there stories..

Also, check out AfricAid’s new video about the Kisa Project — a few girls were chosen to speak to how the program has changed their lives…and Happiness is one of them!

 

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Kisa Scholars’ Surprise from STF & Arianna Huffington!

This past April, our blog was bursting with excitement over Arianna Huffington’s nationally publicized support of She’s the First.  Not only did The Huffington Post‘s Impact section declare Elizabeth David, a sponsored student in Tanzania, “Greatest Person of the Day,” but Ms. Huffington also sent us three signed copies of her autobiographic books to pass on to Elizabeth, Happiness, and Grace!  We are thrilled to announce that Ms. Huffington’s book On Becoming Fearless . . . in Love, Work, and Life has reached AfricAid’s Kisa Scholars! Ashley Shuyler of AfricAid sent us some photos to share of the students receiving their She’s the First yearbook and the copies of On Becoming Fearless. Have you read the book, too? We recommend it!

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Thank You Note from Happiness in Tanzania

We just received a new note from our Kisa Scholar Happiness (below) — filled with gratitude! You may remember it was Happiness’ birthday on April 27th…for those of you who left greetings here, she saw them and is so touched! Last weekend, the girls received their copy of the She’s the First yearbook, and Happiness LOVED it!

Happiness, Grace, Elizabeth with their STF Yearbook

Later in the week, she received her autographed copy of Arianna Huffington’s book On Becoming Fearless. (This surprise came by way of her classmate Elizabeth getting published on the HuffPo in March; be sure to read the story here!)

We couldn’t be prouder of the Kisa Scholars, whom we sponsored with GIRLS WHO ROCK 2010, and are so grateful to have the means to email them directly…do you have any questions or messages you’d like us to pass along? Post in the comments!

hello everyone am glad and was very happy to see the post about my birthday..thanks
well on tuesday last week we had guests in our kisa lesson and it was fun…i personally got the 1st she’s the first yearbook its amazing and thanks to Arinna for the novel”fearless”its amazing too…
love, Happiness

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Kisa Scholars Receive a Surprise from She’s the First!

Happiness, Grace, Elizabeth

Ashley Shuyler, the founder of AfricAid, a partner of She’s the First in Tanzania, is now visiting the girls in the Kisa Project sponsorship program! When we saw Ashley in NYC last April, we gave her a copy of a yearbook we made on shutterfly.com, filled with photos of our first year as an organization. We ordered an extra copy for the Kisa Scholars, sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK 2010, and had the She’s the First volunteer team sign it like a yearbook during our leadership summit in January.

Today, the book arrived in Elizabeth,  Happiness, and Grace’s hands! Ashley posted the photo above to Facebook and sent us this note:

The girls could not have been more elated with their She’s the First yearbook today! They were truly on Cloud 9 and spent literally the hour after class looking through it and oohing and ahhing over every picture — several times. :) I have a dozen photos or so, but the one I attached was about 5 seconds after we gave it to them. They were so excited! I have yet to share the Arianna Huffington books — we’ll do that on Tuesday, when our large AfricAid group visits the school. They will be so excited! I’ll be sure to share more photos and send them whenever I can get a good connection!

All the best from TZ,
Ashley

Check out what the Kisa Scholars saw here (if you supported STF in 2010, maybe your photo is in it)!

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Wish Happiness a Happy Birthday in Tanzania!

Happiness Monyo

We received an email from Happiness Monyo, one of our Kisa Scholars sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK 2010, that we could not wait to share with you!

hey Hannah, am doing good…we are in Easter holidays now…we will go back to
school..on Tuesday and my birthday is on Wednesday on 27th April..am with my
family at a family reunion..am happy and am with my best friend Agness
Mbise…she is a kisa scholar as well..

After hearing from Happiness, we wanted to send her a special Happy Birthday from the She’s the First community.

Happiness: Wishing you light, love, and learning on your special day. Keep reaching for the stars and working hard, we are so very proud of you. Here’s to another year packed full with joy, excitement, and beautiful surprises. Wishing you all the happiness in the world on this day.

Be sure to leave your birthday messages for Happiness below in the comments!

From all of us at She’s the First: Happy Birthday, Happiness!

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A Surprise from Arianna Huffington for the Kisa Scholars

You may remember our excitement when The Huffington Post profiled She’s the First for Women’s History Month in March. It got better: Arianna Huffington tweeted the story to her 600,000+ followers. And then, the icing on the cake was when we submitted an essay from Elizabeth David, sponsored in Tanzania, and she was featured on the homepage of The Huffington Post Impact section, as  “Greatest Person of the Day,” making Elizabeth the first She’s the First sponsored student to become a published author in major media!

Tweet from @AriannaHuff about She's the First

We wrote to Elizabeth about her achievement, and told her a little bit more about Arianna Huffington’s career, including that she had written an inspiring book On Becoming Fearless….in Love, Work and Life, of which we’d be sure to send her a copy. Elizabeth was overjoyed:

I’m so very happy about the news you gave me,you realy made my day. Thank you so much for the book that you’ll be sending me,I love reading books and I’m sure I will love the book….I must say one of the things I enjoy doing is writting and hearing from you guys.I must be very lucky to have you guys as my sponsors.
With lots of love,
Elizabeth.

Elizabeth's Huffington Post feature

We figured we’d go to Barnes & Noble as a last resort, but first, we wrote to Arianna’s office and requested an autographed copy of the book for Elizabeth, and her two fellow Kisa Scholars sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK, Happiness and Grace. It never hurts to ask…because yesterday, three inscribed copies of the book arrived! We are so excited to deliver them to AfricAid founder Ashley Shuyler when we meet her for breakfast on Thursday. She’s visiting NYC from Colorado and will be packing up for Tanzania soon, when she’ll hand deliver the books to the girls for us.

We can’t even imagine how touched Elizabeth, Happiness, and Grace will be to know that one of the busiest women in media opened her heart up to them and cared about sending them a copy of a semi-autobiographic book packed with her best wisdom.

Thank you, Ms. Arianna Huffington, from all of us at She’s the First! You inspire us to make an Impact, each and every day.

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A Note of Gratitude from Happiness in Tanzania

Happiness Monyo

We received an email from Happiness, one of our Kisa Scholars sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK 2010 this week — she glows with gratitude for her education, provided by AfricAid’s Kisa Project and She’s the First funding. Notes like these come from the heart…feel free to leave one in return in the comments, and we’ll send it back to Happiness:

i love my community..a wonderful place that has made me who i am today..the
people and all the available opportunities that have mould me,made me and
gave me love,care,the concern to people for the betterment of everyone
living….
i love Tanzania my beautiful country that has made me a glowing star to
every one that looks upon me,a leader of myself,others and the nation;
i love kisa..a place were i get to create my own leadership stories that
hopefully will change alot of negative impacts in my society into inspiring
ones for every one to look upon..
i am the change i want to see in my community because who i am today and what
i become in the future is my responsibility
and most of all,i love she’s the first,thanks for making me part of the
family..love u

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New Notes from Happiness and Grace in Tanzania

As part of their involvement in AfricAid’s Kisa Project sponsorship program, the three girls we support in Tanzania thanks to GIRLS WHO ROCK were recently asked to write to us about education and communication in their society. We are excerpting two paragraphs, written by Grace and Happiness, and we encourage you leave to some questions for them to answer in the next round of letters!

Grace wrote this about Education — do you want to ask/comment on anything about her environmental classes? Leave a comment!

Grace Lyimo

Education is very important in my life because with education I could know how there are different things going in the world, what are the causes of things, like global warming and what their solutions, what should be done so as to solve different problems like desertification and mostly it could help us to live with different people I community and a good examples. It’s through education I know what are characteristics of different tribes and how do people live in their societies. Also, I learn many things which I could us them as asset to help my society and mostly thorugh education I could be employed and help my society rather than if I won’t get education. Other people who didn’t got much education, most of them lack job and they engage themselves in different crimes like the use of alcohol, robbering and drug abuse, which leads to decline of economy of the community and a country as a whole because people will use a lot of money to help those people rather than engage in productive activities.

Happiness wrote about Communication — curious to know more about her Facebook interactions? Leave a comment!

Happiness Monyo

Communication is all about sharing information, ideas and building relationship. People communicate in order to fulfill certain goals, find solution to certain problems and gain knowledge concerning task. In my society I communicate with people in different ways. Through group discussion in the class I get to present my ideas, gain knowledge of certain facts. Through phones I get to communicate with people who are far from me, in case a need arise. Through some networks (eg facebook) I get to find friends and share different ideas. I also communicate with children through stories and songs. Therefore, I can say that communication is very important in our societies.

Leave a comment below to learn more from the girls — we’ll pass it along and share their replies! (They’ve come to know & recognize the names of frequent commenters, which is adorable! Thank you all for your time. :-) )

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Our Kisa Scholars in Tanzania: Their True Words & Stories

The newest notes from our Kisa Scholars, sponsored by the GIRLS WHO ROCK benefit concert, are in! Our three girls are back from vacation and have finished their exams. What are you curious to know as far as what it’s like being a teenage girl growing up in Tanzania? Review the girls’ personal stories on video, and please send them a note back. Write in the Comments section and, as always, we’ll send your words along. You’ll read their responses in the next batch of correspondence!

From Happiness Monyo:

helow everyone..am okay and i got home safely..the exams were fair and i hope to do my best…nothing so special has happened at home,i have found everyone fine and healthy i thank God,honey pots are all nature gifts found anywere…


From Elizabeth David:

Hi! hows everything,the exams were a bit tricky,a lot of essay questions but it wasnt that hard just needed a lot of thinking. Hey did I mention that i had a little cat called Hillary but sadly it died the day before I arrived home from school on 7sept.I really miss her a lot.And Tammy you havent told me your age and about your family also how did you start shes the first?Greetings to all and tell Cheryl that I appreciated her message!


From Grace Lyimo:

thanks all of you for your support i real appreciate you!to be honest the holiday is so sweet.my mummy told me to greet all of you so pleas send my greetings to all of you.i love you all!

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Kisa Scholars Check In During Exam Week — Send Them Good Luck!

The next batch of correspondence from our Kisa Scholars, sponsored by the GIRLS WHO ROCK NY benefit concert, are in! Leave your comments and we’ll circle them back to the girls to read, and they’ll answer any questions you have.

Grace Lyimo

Thanks! To be honest you really make happy when I read your message. On first day of the coming month, we’re going to start our examination and after that we will be having an holly day [holiday] of about one and a half or two months. So on this week I will be very busy, final preparation before having my terminal examination. Hope you will be praying for us so that we will would do
something ” wondering” [wonderful].

To me you have been like sisters and I hope one day we will meet face to face. I can’t imagine how happy will I be to see you my dear sisters. I love you all! I will inform you much about how life goose [goes] and how are things at my home and my community [are], because it have been long time since I left my home and come to school. I hope to hear from you soon! Don’t forget to pray for us!!! All the best. – Grace Lyimo

Elizabeth David

Elizabeth David

Hi guys
How are you? I hope you are all well, am just a little busy preparing for my terminal exams which will start on Wednesday this week. Thanks a lot guys for sharing some different cultures that you have in the US. That thing about the accent, I hear it in the movies. [We told her that in the US, people from different states sometimes speak a little differently.] We finished working on the book before we left from the internship and it was such an amaizing experience.

Hey guess what! Next week on Thursday we are gonna start our one month holiday. I’m so excited about going home seeing my mother and sisters. I also miss my friends and home cooked food. I will also get a chance to [show] my mom your
pictures. I will be realy happy to see your video [about Peru]! My greetings to all. – Elizabeth David


And we heard from Happiness — she writes with more brevity than the other girls, but she is doing OK!

Happiness Monyo

Hellow there, well I would love to be an economist because I love economics. What I like most in Tanzania are the honey pots found like the national parks, reserves, water bodies and most of all the peaceful environment found in Tanzania…We are in the week of exams, so many people are busy..and we are going to close for the holidays..am so excited that I will see my family after 6months. – Happiness Monyo

[Editor's Note: Some light grammatical edits have been made to original messages for clarity.]

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Videos by our Kisa Scholars — Sponsored from GIRLS WHO ROCK NY!

Ashley Shuyler, founder of AfricAid and the Kisa Project, on the GIRLS WHO ROCK red carpet

Ashley Shuyler, the founder of AfricAid and its interactive sponsorship program called the Kisa Project, wrote us a detailed progress report on each of the three Tanzanian students we sponsor with profits from GIRLS WHO ROCK in New York City. As we previously blogged, the girls finished a 10-day leadership training summit in July, where they not only learned to launch a business and write a children’s book, but they also created these three videos in which they narrate their lives and dreams!

We proudly present to you each girl’s assessment from Ashley and her digital story — this is your chance to know her better than ever before. Please take a moment to leave a comment back to any or all of the girls, as we will be forwarding them along!

Elizabeth David

Elizabeth David

Elizabeth is one of the smartest girls in the group, usually keeping her opinion quiet, but speaking up at critical moments of a discussion, at which point the other girls really pay attention. As you’ll see in her story, she is committed to becoming a businesswoman so that she can prove to men that girls are capable of doing great things as well. She’s also quite the fashionista of the group, and spent a lot of time looking at the photos of you all and commenting on how beautiful everyone is. :) She truly couldn’t believe that Kat Deluna had performed for her, and she loved watching the video as well and seeing the other performers. She picked up using the computers really quickly and was soon doing Google searches for “Disney movies,” which made me smile. She’s a truly special young lady.”

Grace Lyimo

“I wrote the following about Grace in a dispatch home to friends and family: ‘I wish I could share with you the stories of each of these extraordinarily special young women. But I firmly believe that you’ll be hearing about them in the years ahead – they are determined to make big changes for their families, communities, and nation. One student, Grace, approached me early on in the workshop. Although she was the athlete and jokester of the group, I realized immediately that she had a big vision that she demanded to be taken seriously. She told me that, ever since she was young, she had felt an irresistible need to help orphans and street children – but that her brothers and family had simply laughed at her when she expressed this goal to them. She told me that she had given up hope – both for her dream and for herself – but that everything changed when she was selected for the Kisa Project.  She asked me one evening not long before the end of our time together, “Do you really think I can do it? Can I really help street kids?” When I told her that every person in Kisa was behind her, she revealed that she had already begun making plans to start a small business, through which she would donate a portion of her profits to support street children, and she was beginning to research how to adopt orphans – so that she could adopt two of them in later life. I hugged her with the deepest of admiration.’  You can see that she truly tugged at my hearstrings.  Even though she presents herself as a tough, athletic and cool young lady on the outside (and, by the way, has an unbelievably sophisticated sense of humor), she has the most well-defined and serious vision out of all of our Kisa Scholars, and is absolutely determined to bring it to life.”

Happiness Monyo

Happiness is quiet and unassuming in a group, but when talking one-on-one with her, she comes to life and is really one of the smartest in the group, right up there with Elizabeth. She is very community-minded and would always be watching out for the group and generously helping her fellow students, even when she, herself, came down with a cold. As you’ll see in her digital story, she’s also quite the artist and has had a challenging childhood. She, along with the others, was so excited to hear about the concert!”

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What Happened at the Kisa Leadership Summit?

Group shot! Ashley with the Kisa Scholars during her visit to Tanzania in July

Group shot: Ashley with the Kisa Scholars during her visit to Tanzania in July

Attendees, performers, and donors from our first GIRLS WHO ROCK benefit concert, June 10 in NYC, won’t want to miss this update!

As you know, your support sponsored Elizabeth, Grace, and Happiness in the Kisa Project, a secondary school educational program AfricAid runs in Tanzania, which also enrolls the girls in computer and leadership training. Our Scholars email us messages at least once a month, and we post them here to the blog for you to comment on, and then we relay those messages back to them. Right here on shesthefirst.org, we are so awed to watch a two-year cross-cultural exchange and digital storytelling project unravel, all from one rockin’ night in New York City.

Kisa Scholars present their Kisanet business plan to a group of 30 parents, teachers, guests, and heads of school.

There are some BIG updates with the Kisa Project that recently came our way from founder Ashley Shuyler! She just returned to Colorado from 10 weeks in Tanzania, where she ran a 10-day leadership summit with the girls. The girls had a challenge: start a sustainable service project or business that they would take back to their school communities. They had to write a business plan, create a budget and a marketing plan, and present all this to 30 parents, teachers, and heads of school. Ashley says the end product was remarkable. The Scholars chose to teach computer classes at a low cost to students and community members who otherwise couldn’t afford to take such a course. Ashley writes:

Their reasoning behind choosing a computer-based project was compelling: they identified that, although they have little capital, they do have an incredible resource in the Kisa-installed computer labs at their partner schools; and, at the same time, their research revealed a great need for increased computer literacy in Tanzania – not only do most jobs now require some familiarity with computers, but additionally, the Tanzanian government recently mandated that all college applications be submitted online, even when most students have never used a computer. I couldn’t have been prouder when, on the final day of the workshop, the students launched their inaugural computer class to a group of street kids and young Maasai women from a local school – all of whom left the class chattering excitedly about their new-found knowledge skills. This, from a group of girls who themselves had never touched a computer before becoming part of Kisa.

We have to say with special pride that in Ashley’s email to AfricAid’s supporters, she singled out one girl’s story from this leadership workshop — and it was Grace, one of our girls! Here’s what she said:

One student, Grace, approached me early on in the workshop. Although she was the athlete and jokester of the group, I realized immediately that she had a big vision that she demanded to be taken seriously. She told me that, ever since she was young, she had felt an irresistible need to help orphans and street children – but that her brothers and family had simply laughed at her when she expressed this goal to them. She told me that she had given up hope – both for her dream and for herself – but that everything changed when she was selected for the Kisa Project.  She asked me one evening not long before the end of our time together, “Do you really think I can do it? Can I really help street kids?” When I told her that every person in Kisa was behind her, she revealed that she had already begun making plans to start a small business, through which she would donate a portion of her profits to support street children, and she was beginning to research how to adopt orphans – so that she could adopt two of them in later life. I hugged her with the deepest of admiration. (If you’re interested, you can watch a digital story created by Grace and her dreams here.)

Ashley also sent us individual feedback on each of our three girls, which we will share with you in an upcoming post this week. Thanks for reading through this lengthy one — but wasn’t every word part of a big, beaming smile on your face now?

* More photos from AfricAid on Facebook *

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Introducing Happiness: 2nd Student Sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK!

Happiness Myoto, sponsored in AfricAid's Kisa Project, through She's the First -- specifically GIRLS WHO ROCK! Happiness aspires to  be an economist.

Happiness Monyo, sponsored in AfricAid's Kisa Project, through She's the First -- specifically GIRLS WHO ROCK! Happiness aspires to be an economist.

The profits of GIRLS WHO ROCK, our benefit concert on June 10th — in addition to proceeds from its raffle and $500+ raised on GiveForward.org — allowed us to triple our goal of sending a girl to school in Tanzania. We raised nearly $6,000, enough to enroll three girls in AfricAid’s Kisa Project, which is an Internet-infused sponsorship program, where girls also learn leadership and computer training. They will graduate from secondary school — something 95% of Tanzanian girls currently cannot afford. We’ve been emailing with our first student, Elizabeth David, for the past month, and many of you have interacted with her via comments on this blog.

Now, we begin our exchanges with Happiness! Please leave her comments and questions, and we’ll pass them along.

hello there,
Its me, hope your ok…I am very glad to have you as my sponsors. Your such an inspiring group and its nice to know what you do for your communities and others as well..gr8 work u guys! I hope as time goes by we’ll get to know more of each other…and I might tell you all about whats going on in my society, and any other stuffs you would like to know about…ok, let me tell you a little about me…
I am Happpiness as you all know, I live in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania..I live with my mum and brother so its just the three of us..its really fun, am a Christian, I love music, and am passionate about bringing positive changes in my society…thats all about me for now..hope you have a wonderful time and all the best in your daily duties.

[Editor's Note: Email has been edited for capitalization.]

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