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Tag Archives: Kisa Project
Updates from Eli and Glory in Tanzania
In October, Val Martin of The Uplifting Project (and a great friend of STF!) traveled to Tanzania, and stopped in to say hello to some of the girls we sponsor there. She met with Eli and Glory, two girls in their first of two years at The Kisa Project, where they’re learning computer, leadership, and life skills. We sent along a photo album of our favorite places in NYC (which you can check out here!), and Val talked to them about their future plans. Doesn’t Eli look great in her I ❤ NY tee?
And guess what? Next week, we’re holding an event here in New York during Social Media Week — and no matter where you are, you can take part by helping us to sponsor Eli’s last year of school! Just watch for the #SMWMagic hashtag next Thursday, February 16th. For every time it’s used, The Think Cloud will donate $1 toward her sponsorship — and I know you guys can make it happen.
Have a message for Eli or Glory? Leave it in the comments and we’ll make sure it gets to her! Plus, check out more photos from Val’s trip below:
Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project
Tagged AfricAid, Eli, Glory John, Kisa Project, social media week, tanzania
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Kisa Scholars Publish Book at End of Their School Year
Have you ever wanted to write a children’s book? It is certainly one of my dreams but I am grateful that our Kisa Scholars have had the chance to make a dream like this come true.
I always know that another year is wrapping for the Kisa Scholars when the news of the children’s book arrives. This year, the Kisa Scholars helped write a newly published booked called Sam Learns Some Lessons. The really cool thing about it? They’ve based the content on stories the Kisa girls created during a writing workshop. Not only does the book highlight the girls’ creativity but it also shows its wide audience the true importance behind educating girls and empowering women, not only in Tanzania but all across the globle. The book was published by Dot-to-Dot Children’s Books, and can be purchased here. This marks the second book put out by girls at our partner schools; earlier this year, Starfish One by One in Guatemala also released a children’s book!
We are looking forward to reporting back on how the school year went for all the Kisa Scholars of ours!
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project
Tagged book, Kisa Project, Sam Learns Some Lessons, tanzania
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Girls’ Education in Tanzania: A Must-Have
A recent article printed in the Guardian tackled the issue of a growing population in Tanzania and how educating girls and women can help reduce pregnancies in the regions. Tanzania, the 172nd poorest nation in the world, is the home to our partner school, the Kisa Project.
As the researcher behind the Kisa Project, I am learning daily the great difficulties that Tanzanian girls face, especially when they become pregnant at a young age and are unable to keep progressing in the classroom. As the article mentions, stigmatization is high when a young girl must drop out of school to have a baby. Young girls are left with no choice but to leave their school books behind to care for their child, giving up their dreams to become nurses and teachers in their country.
Often we think that poverty stems from “no money,” when really, poverty in Tanzania is associated with illiteracy. A lack of the ABCs. A lack of the 1-2-3s. The Tanzanian Government is saying that the high fertility rate is coming from the low educational status of women throughout the country. And how can a woman combat this status when they have no chance to learn to read?
Programs like the Kisa Project are working to change the culture and the norms in Tanzania by giving girls the fuel they need to stay in school and push on towards a bright future. As always, I am eager to see our Kisa Scholars go out and tackle statistics like the ones above to bring more of their sisters into the gift of education.
A Surprise for the Kisa Girls from STF in NYC!
Next week, Val Martin is headed to Tanzania to visit the Kisa Project, and she’s going to be bringing them a special surprise from She’s the First! Check out the cool photo album we made for them of all our favorite places in NYC. Think they’ll like it?
Kisa Project Strengthens Its Classroom Leaders
If you are clicking through the pages of She’s the
First, then chances are you have something in common with us. We keep girls’ education at the forefront of the work that we do as researchers and team players, but we also know that for a girl to be educated well, she must have a strong teacher at the head of the class.
I admire the Kisa Project for their continued attention to detail in that area. They are not just raising scholars and future leaders from the school desks, they are always looking for ways to mold and morph the leaders they already have at the front of the classroom.
This year, AfricAid invited 18 teachers from among the five Kisa partner schools in Arusha and Monduli, Tanzania, to participate in the Teaching in Action workshop. The T.I.A. workshop is a great way for teachers to get the experience they need to bring leadership skills and stimulation to the classroom.
We cannot wait to see how this workshop benefits the Kisa girls in the future!
Can You Help Elizabeth Find Colleges in London?

Elizabeth David, a KISA Scholar in Tanzania sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK 2010, is enjoying a well-deserved holiday from school right now, and is using her time off to dream big about her future! She wants to go to business school in London, but needs our help!
In our most recent letter to Elizabeth, we told her about UN Week in New York and asked her what she thought about us sharing her letters with all of you – it sounds like she is excited to hear from the She’s the First community! Check out her letter below, and help us do some research on her behalf!
Elizabeth Says:
Hi,
Its realy nice to hear from you guys since i’ve missed your letters a lot. My holiday is going well but kind of fast though. By the way, I had a favor to ask, please when you have time can you help me to do a research on the net on good universities in London which provide scholarships and some other important info cause I was thinking about having my first degree of business administration there. I will be very gratefull.Till next time,
Elizabeth.
Do you want to help out and do some research on London universities for her? Do you have any advice for her in her college search? We know you all have great ideas! Leave her comments below and we’ll send them back to her!
Posted in Penpals
Tagged college, elizabeth david, Kisa Project, London, penpals, tanzania
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Introducing Elizabeth Abshire: AfricAids’s New Executive Director
[ Editor's Note: Today I am wicked excited to introduce you to the newest member of the STF extended family: Elizabeth Abshire. Elizabeth is the new Executive Director of AfricAid, one of our partners in Tanzania, and will be taking over for Ashley Schuyler as she heads back to school. As the researcher for Kisa, I had the pleasure to ask Elizabeth a few questions about her work and hopes for the Kisa Project in the future. Enjoy!]

Elizabeth Abshire, new Executive Director at AfricAid
EA: It was a job posting on the Colorado non-profit job board. I was in a corporate position and looking for a change. My heart was really in Africa already.
STF: You mentioned running your own nonprofit for a few years in Kenya. Where did you first develop a passion for social change? Do you have a special tie or connection to Africa?
EA: I started a non-profit in 2007 that focused on educational opportunities in Kenya, specifically in Kibera which is a large slum area in Nairobi. I have been intrigued by Africa my entire life and finally had a chance to visit in 2007. I could not come home and live my life the same way after that.
STF: We love advocating for girls’ education (obviously). What message about girls’ education would you like to send the world?
EA: This is really the key. Everyone wants to help and there are so many great missions. I believe that many of the efforts treat the systems of poverty. Educating a girl gets to the core and will transform villages, nations and continents.
STF: Running a nonprofit in the US that creates social change in the developing world can be a difficult task. How do you make people in this country care about the issues in the developing world?
EA: It can be challenging, though I’ve found most people care intrinsically if you can slow them down enough to talk to them. It also helps if they’ve had any experience in a third world, developing nation.
STF: What has it been like getting to interact with the girls at the Kisa Project?
EA: Truly amazing! Everyday I am inspired by their dedication, strength, and brilliance. I’ve never seen girls their age who so understand the value of education in the way they do.
STF: What are you hoping to work on and/or make better with AfricAid in the coming years?
EA: I think AfricAid has a wonderful direction and vision. My hope is to extend it across Tanzania and other countries in Africa.
STF: As you are just getting adjusted to your new job, what has been the most rewarding and the most challenging aspects of your journey thus far?
EA: The most rewarding aspect was definitely my trip to Tanzania in May. It was indescribable to see our programs in action and the real difference they made in girls’ lives.
The most challenging has been learning the new organization culture and really focusing on fundraising. In my corporate job I was given a budget to spend, now I need to raise it, too.
STF: She’s the First is all about taking pride in being the “first” — just asmany girls we sponsor are the first in their family to graduate. What are you the “first” to do?
EA: I’m the first in my family to start a non-profit — and to leave the corporate world to run one!
Thanks so much for the interview, Elizabeth! We look forward to seeing the positive growth and change that will surely come to Kisa in the months to come!
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project
Tagged Africa, elizabeth abshire, kisa, Kisa Project, new director, tanzania, The Kisa Project
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Be a Penpal with Glory John from Tanzania!
Thanks to the funds raised from our Flip cams, She’s the First has been able to sponsor two more girls from the Kisa Project! Meet Glory John, one of the lucky girls, and and become her penpal by writing to her in the comments!

Glory John is 19 years old and the first born in her family. We recently received a letter from Glory John about what she’s doing in school and a little more about her and how excited she is to be a part of the She’s the First family.
Glory John says:
Hello She’s the first!
Am very happy to have you as my sponsors, friends and important people in my life.
I am Glory John, a form five student at ENABOISHU HIGH SCHOOL. Am glad that i got a chance to be here for my further education. My ambition is to work on big companies like UN since i really wish to help women,orphans,refugees and street children.
I fill sorry for my self because i did not make a digital story. But i wish one day to do that and you will get to hear it when am done. Is that fine with you my dudes?
guess what!I only stay with my father my mother passed away almost 6 years ago, i some time miss her allot and wish to be by her side but she is no where to be seen. Am sure if she could be around and hear everything about KISA she could be proud of me and you my sponsors. But God is good he has given me new friends{sponsors}who have been good to me always and they are very concern. IT’S YOU SHE’S THE FIRST.
I love you more than you can guess and i wish one day to see you all. You know what? Am proud of you all cause you told me some of you are doing music and is the thing i really love in life.
Will you mind to tell me which kind of music are you doing?
Comment below and tell Glory all about your favorite music, and ask the questions you want answered about her life. We’ll send your notes to her to answer!
[Editor's note: Letters from students are not edited for grammar, style, etc.]
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project, Penpals
Tagged Glory John, Kisa Project, penpals, tanzania
1 Comment
Be a Penpal with Eli from Tanzania!

Meet Eli! She’s one of the two new Kisa Scholars now sponsored in the AfricAid program in Tanzania. The $4,000+ raised from sales of the She’s the First Flip cam collection funded her education, making all of YOU her sponsors.
Eli wrote to us this week, letting us that she’s now the head girl and expressing what it means to her to have your support and encouragement. We’re so inspired and moved by her words, and we know you will be, too:
thanks a lot ladies !!!!
i am doing well in school and i am very busy preparing my self for the terminals exams next week !!!
i have good news 4 kisa members and you sponsors!!!most of us have chosen to be leaders here at school!!! we had election last week and i am THE HEAD GIRL!! Now i can make what i learn in kisa IN ACTION!!! Lovely!!!
at SCHOOL I am doing HISTORY ,LANGUAGE ,PHILOSOPHY & SWAHILI!!!! SO HOPEFULLY I WILL BE JOURNALIST !! I HOPE TO READ YOUR MAGAZINES!!!!!!!
AM HAPPY BECAUSE NOW I CAN STAND AND TELL PEOPLE WHAT IS WRITE AND WHAT IS WRONG IN LIFE!!I LEARN TO FORGIVE AND FORGET!! THERE IS WHERE YOU CAN MOVE ON!!!IN KISA WE LEARN ABOUT MARTIN LUTHER AND MAHATMA GANDHI !!THE PEOPLE WHO BELIEVED IN LOVE! TEY SAY ,”LOVE YOUR ENEMY
!’”WHEN YOU LOVE AND FORGET & FORGIVE THEN YOUR LIFE BE PROGRESS!!!
IT IS GOOD WHEN YOU HAVE COURAGE!!!WHEN YOU HAVE SUPPORTERS!!! U FEEL YOU ARE NO LONGER A LONE !!!AND THERE IS WHERE YOU FIGHT TO MAKE YOUR DREAMS COME REALITY !!WE SHOULD NOT LIVE OUR DREAMS BUT WE ARE THE ONE MAKES OUR DREAMS LIVE!!!
KISA IS THE BEST FAMILY !!THE FAMILY THAT UP GRADE!!!I AM HAPPY BEING IN KISA !!I HOPE TO HERE BACK FROM YOU SO SOON!!!
Here’s the digital story she put together to tell us about her life. She’s already a digital storyteller!
Eli wants to be a journalist and help women and children, just like so many on the She’s the First team. Comment on her video and letter below and we will ensure she gets all your warm messages of support. Check back for her response!
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project, Penpals
Tagged eliankunda kaaya, Kisa Project, penpals, tanzania
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A Digital Story From The Kisa Project
I could easily spend an entire day watching the digital stories made by the girls at the Kisa Project in Tanzania. Each month, the Kisa Project features a scholar, setting her story to music and pictures and allowing the girl to tell it herself.
Meet Dorca, the girl who has inspired me today. Dorca tells her amazing story about the hardship and the struggle it took to get an education. Dorca is the first lady in her family to pursue an advanced level of schooling! She attributes her determination to her family who taught her to always be independent.
Thanks for being the first, Dorca! You inspire all of us!
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project
Tagged Digital Storytelling, Kisa Project, tanzania
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Kisa Scholars Get Special Visitors in Tanzania
Sponsors share a meal in Tanzania
Our Kisa Scholars in Tanzania had an exciting month, thanks to special guests who came during one very exciting week in June!
AfricAid and Africa Adventure Consultants led their first guided trip to visit the girls, on the way taking participants through the Serengeti and Tanzanian culture.
Though seeing the wild animals in the jungle was a thrill, participants attested that meeting the girls was the best part of the trip. The Kisa Project scholars don’t leave the campus throughout the school year, so they warmly welcomed their guests. They adored sharing stories with their sponsors and getting to know one another.
The group visited two primary schools during the trip, Upendo and Losinoni, and two secondary schools, Muungano and Arusha Secondary. They even had the chance to visit some of the homes throughout the area.
Plenty of sharing was done by all; the Kisa girls were very excited to meet sponsors and a 2012 trip is already in the works.
The June 2011 newsletter was packed with a lot of energy and excitement and even some questions to fuel dialogue between the Kisa Scholars and us. Here is a personal favorite of mine: Who is the most inspiring woman leader you know? Share your answer in the comments below!
Kisa Scholars Pay it Forward to Younger Students
We are so excited to hear how the scholars over at AfricAid’s Kisa Project, one of our partner programs in Tanzania, pay it forward to younger girls just entering into the two-year program.
We recently received an update on a trip some of the current Kisa Scholars from Arusha Secondary School made to two Tanzanian secondary schools entering the program–Edmund Rice Secondary School and Enaboishu Secondary School. The scholars spoke to the girls about how the Kisa Project can be their gateway to success. They encouraged the girls to apply for this program run by AfricAid. Nice, a current scholar, said: “We girls have great dreams to make change in our communities. Opportunities are there; we should grab them with our two hands. Kisa is an opportunity!”
As always, we are beyond excited to see the Kisa Scholar program grow and spread into more communities in Tanzania. You can support by writing comments back to Elizabeth, Grace and Happiness, the three Kisa Scholars She’s the First sponsored in 2010 as a result of GIRLS WHO ROCK. They are now in their second year of the program. (We are about to begin correspondence with two more Kisa Scholars, Eli and Glory, whose education was funded by the $4,000+ our Flip cams raised!) And of course, you could help fundraise to sponsor a sixth scholar — learn more here!
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!
7th Graders Start a She’s the First Chapter in Iowa!

Campus Coordinators Monica & Casey first skyped the students at VanMeter to spark their interest in She's the First!
She’s the First*{Campus} started with several highly motivated college students who wanted to help change the world. After several successful college chapters have been in place, a group of students at Van Meter is changing the game. They are now the first non-college chapter to be established, and I have had the privilege of working with them from the beginning.
The mind behind all of this, Shannon Miller, was preceded by her reputation before I met her, from winning a Shorty Award for social media. Shannon was incredibly enthusiastic about starting a chapter with a group of 7th grade girls she teaches, and I contacted her initially to help start this. At our first meeting, she assured me that these girls were something special, and they have already proven it.
Fellow Campus Coordinator Monica Townsend and I skyped with the girls before school one morning to hear their ideas for summer fundraising and help them choose a partner school from the STF directory. They have decided to sponsor a girl through the AfricAid Kisa Project with the hope that social media and technology will help them connect with the girl and share her story throughout their town in Van Meter, Iowa.
Within hours these girls were already well on their way to setting up fundraisers and giving talks to their school. I have no doubt that these girls will have great success with She’s the First, and already stand out as leaders for a new direction in STF chapters. Be sure to follow them on Twitter at @STF_vanmeter, on Facebook, and their brand-new blog: http://shesthefirstvanmeter.blogspot.com.
I’m proud to give you a little bit of the back story, but now you should read Shannon Miller’s point of view on her blog! Her students are not waiting.
Digital Forefronts with the Kisa Project
She’s the First is definitely a tech-savvy organization; its engine’s powered by social media and digital storytelling. But we aren’t the only ones who have exploring this concept of digital storytelling.
One thing that I love about the Kisa Project in Tanzania, the school that I correspond and communicate with, is how passionate they are when it comes to sharing stories. Kisa even meaning “story” in Swahili, the girls in this program are no strangers to utilizing the media to connect with others across borders and boundaries.
Every month the Kisa Project updates its interactive site with digital content produced by the girls in the program. The short videos feature a different girl each time, giving the young woman a chance to tell her own story.
It is great way to get up close and personal with the girls we are sponsoring through She’s the First. And I can guarantee that you will only need five minutes to get swept up in the stories of these courageous and smart young women.
Stay updated with the digital stories by subscribing to the Kisa Project eNewsletters, a great opportunity to get news from the girls straight into your inbox.
Be sure to check out this month’s featured story by Jackline, a Kisa scholar at Arusha Secondary School.
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project
Tagged AfricAid, Digital Storytelling, Kisa Project, tanzania
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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.
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
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!
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.]
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project
Tagged elizabeth david, grace lyimo, happiness monyo, Kisa Project, student letters
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What Happened at the Kisa Leadership Summit?
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 *
Introducing Grace: 3rd Student Sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK

Grace Lyimo -- she's excited to "meet" her co-sponsors from GIRLS WHO ROCK. Leave a message! p.s. her bday is July 28th!
GIRLS WHO ROCK exceeded our expectations as a benefit for She’s the First — we not only raised enough to sponsor Elizabeth David in AfricAid’s Kisa Project, but also Happiness Monyo and Grace Lyimo, who we are proud to introduce you to now! Remember that the wonderful thing about hosting GIRLS WHO ROCK during Internet Week New York was that this sponsorship program is truly Internet-infused. We will receive emails from the girls monthly, and by posting their letters to She’s the First, we enable you to leave comments, which we then forward to them. Please ask questions and share encouragement!
I am very happy to have you, really it so amazing!
I am Grace Lyimo, a student of Arusha Secondary School, form five, taking history, geography and economics. I like singing, dancing, charting, and making new friends who we can share ideas. Really I am very happy to have you and may I pleas know your name? I just know only two of you, who are Ashley and Kat DeLuna. I do like the song of Kat DeLuna very much so I fell like fly to know that she is one among you. Hope we will going to know much about each other. I like you photo very much please send more to us. I have to sign out hope we will communicate later.
[Editor's Note: Minor spelling and grammar edits made. But Grace's words in tact!]
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project, GIRLS WHO ROCK
Tagged grace lyimo, Kisa Project, tanzania
2 Comments
Neema Thomas
Meet Neema Thomas, a 19-year-old in AfricAid’s Kisa Project. She is in 12th grade at Moringe Secondary School in Tanzania. Neema is from Serengeti Disctrict, but currently lives with her brother in Arusha.
Neema is already dreaming of working to empower women and children facing hardship in her country and loves that the Kisa Project is giving her the tools to work towards that goal.
To learn more about Neema in her own words, watch her video below!
If you’d like to leave Neema a message, you can comment below. We will collect them and send them on to her, and update here when she writes back!
Neema is currently being sponsored in 2012 by the Knights of Columbus, Notre Dame.










