Tag Archives: Oprah

Sirleaf Inaugurated, New Guatemalan President & More

Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf Inauguarated for Second Term
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was inaugurated today for her second term as president of Liberia, promising continued work on reconciliation in the war-torn country. Read more here.

Guatemala Elects New President
The new president of Guatemala, Otto Perez Molina, was recently sworn into office after his election victory in November. Molina, a former army general, has promised to bring profound change to Guatemala, including big efforts to restore security, reduce poverty and improve on child malnutrition. Read more here.

First Graduates at Oprah’s South African Girls’ School
In a region where most girls don’t graduate from high school, the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls is thrilled to celebrate its first graduation with 72 girls, all of which come from poor and disadvantaged families. All of the girls are headed on to university with hopes of changing the world. “When you invest in the leadership of girls you invest in a nation,” said Winfrey. Read it all here.

Maternal Health Challenges in Somalia
According to the World Health Organization, Somalia has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world. The recent famine has only made matters worse for expecting mothers, many of which are malnourished and living in resettlement camps. A lack of equipment and inadequate facilities have also made it extremely difficult for women to get the proper care they need throughout pregnancy and delivery. Read more here.

Indian Computer Tablet Could Shake Up Education
A new low-cost tablet selling for as little as £35 should allow Indians in rural areas to access the Internet on a regular basis. Read more here.

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14-Year-Old Pakistani Girl Advocates for Girls’ Ed & More

Nigerian Community Demands Education for Girls
The Nigerian community of Katagum is demanding the government establish a girls secondary school in the region. A spokesman for the community says families are hoping for a local school so their daughters will no longer have to travel long distances to get an education. Read it here.

Fourteen Year Old Emerges as Role Model for Pakistani Girls
When Malala Yusafzai was eleven years old she started blogging against the Taliban in support of girls’ rights. She has been especially outspoken about girls’ education and wants “all the girls to get a higher education to play their role in the society.” Her blogging earned her a nomination for the International Children’s Peace Prize. Malala, who is now fourteen, hopes to one day become a  politician and encourage more Pakistani girls to contribute to society. Read Malala’s story here.

Rwanda Fights AIDS with New Education Program
In acknowledgement of World AIDS Day, Rwanda announced that country health officials will fight the spread of AIDS with a new education program. The ambitious plan will implement educational programs into every school in the country over the next three months, promoting abstinence in hopes of preventing HIV/AIDs, warding off unwanted pregnancies and keeping girls in school. Get the story here.

Oprah Winfrey’s South African Girls School See First Graduating Class
Seventy-two girls will be the first to graduate from Oprah Winfrey’s South African secondary school in January. Every member of the class will continue on with their education at universities in either South Africa or the United States. Read more here.

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Rwanda’s Speaker on Girls’ Ed, Oprah in South Africa, and More

Keeping Girls in Northern Uganda in School
Only 38 percent of the Gulu population of girls is enrolled in school, but a unique project in Northern Uganda is working to change that stat. The Gulu and Amuru Districts are keeping girls in school with the production of their own sanitary pads. Menstruation is a major reason girls drop out of school at a young age. The UN reported that the girls are now staying after school to make their own sanitary pads from cheap, locally-procured materials. Read more here.

Rwanda’s Speaker of Parliament Talks Girls’ Ed
Rwanda’s Speaker of Parliament, Rose Mukantabana, held talks with a delegation of members from the European Union Parliament on girls education and gender-based violence over the weekend. Read more here.

Girls Gain a Global Voice
Tabby Biddle of the Huffington Post recently wrote an article on her participation with the second annual Global Girl Media Training Academy. Last summer the pilot project called KICK IT UP! trained 30 high-school age girls in Soweto, South Africa and East Los Angeles during the 2010 FIFA World Cup. This year, Global Girl Media provided training to eight teenage girls from underserved communities in Los Angeles and 10 HIV-positive girls from Soweto, South Africa. Be sure to check out the article for some inspiring quotes and messages from some of the girls. Read more here.

Oprah Steps to the Front of the Class
We’ve seen her in just about every arena and she’s been known for her philanthropic efforts in school-building, but this fall Oprah will step to the front of the class in South Africa not as a guest speaker, but as a teacher. Oprah will teach a class at the all-girls school she opened in South Africa four years ago.  The class will be called “It’s Life 101.” I want to know: Are there any open slots, Oprah?! Read more here.

Three Months Later — Learnings from the Greg Mortensen Controversy
Adam Braun gives his take on the Mortensen controversy in a recent Huffington Post article: What have we learned from CAI’s mistakes? See what he thinks here.

 

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Girls’ Ed in Rwanda, Coeds in India, & Oprah

Champion of Girls Education Named Oprah’s Favorite Guest

“Education is the only weapon women have to fight poverty, indignity and hunger,” said Dr. Tererai Trent.  Despite enduring an abusive relationship and being a child bride, Trent relentlessly chased her dream of receiving an education.  Now, after being denied the opportunity to go to school as a young girl, Trent is a PhD. scholar.  During her last show on Friday, Oprah surprised this incredible woman by naming Trent her favorite guest on the show and donating $1.5 million to Trent’s efforts to build a school in Zimbabwe! To learn more, follow this link.

Co-Ed Schools Gaining Popularity in India

In Mumbai, a shift in education is occurring.  More parents are opting to send their children to co-ed schools in hopes that a more holistic education surrounded by peers from both genders will result in students feeling more comfortable with one another.  To learn more about the social change in India, follow this link.

Students in Rwanda Praise Equal Education Opportunities

Students at Rwanda’s Lycee de Kigali are praising the school’s efforts to promote girls education.  Nabella Umuhoza, a female student studying Physics, Chemistry, and Biology, remarked, “The provision of equal education opportunities for girls and boys allowed us girls to compete with boys in all subjects.”  Follow this link to read more about the growing educational opportunities in Rwanda!

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Introducing Azure Antoinette, Our Poetry Workshop Host!

As emcee of She’s the First Poetry Month, I was so lucky to have the chance to interview Azure Antoinette, featured in this month’s issue of O, the Oprah Magazine as a notable spoken-word poet.

Ms. Antoinette will lead a workshop on the art of performance poetry with students at the Young Women’s Leadership School in Brooklyn this Tuesday with She’s the First. These girls will gain an understanding of their global sisters in the She’s the First directory, some of whom have written poetry published in our blog, as they pen and perform their own words.

To drum up some excitement for the week ahead, I called Azure in the midst of her travels for an interview. Once again, a special thank you to Azure for volunteering to fly out to New York City to take part in this special workshop! We can’t wait to meet her in person in 24 hours!

STF: We were lucky enough to find you via Twitter as we searched for a poet to lead a workshop in a Brooklyn school. What prompted you to get involved with our She’s the First initiative?

Azure: I first saw it on the @girlswritenow timeline. I don’t always jump at the first thing I see, but what inspired me about the posting was that it was a push. It was a tool reminding young women to make sure that they continue to educate themselves. There is a large pull from the media for beauty and vanity these days but they rarely speak about education the majority of conversation lies around reality TV shows.

I don’t find there are a lot of organizations that are popular, that have a young, fresh appeal to them but also encourage education in young women. I thought She’s the First was a great cause. It urges young women to get out there and make the most educated decision for themselves.

Plus the fact that we were able to connect so quickly on Twitter was great! It’s serendipitous.

STF: Yes, it absolutely is! You’re considered a “voice poet.” Can you define that for us in your own words?

Azure: Well, I do page poetry and stage poetry. I am a performer. Last year I spent a great deal of time working with Maria Shriver, who was the First Lady of California, on her campaign focused on women doing great things in society.

My gift, my blessing, is being able to listen to other people and put that into words. Getting a chance to write first and then perform that is just a dream job. I do page poetry but performance poetry is being able to take it out of the book and give it life.

STF: When did this passion for poetry arise?

Azure: I have been writing since I was very young but my passion initially was music. I didn’t start writing professionally until my early 20s. I started working with a literacy nonprofit in Los Angeles where they used classic authors and their works as recitation tools.

It is important when you are able to get someone else’s words in your body and deliver them seamlessly. You cannot understand where you are going until you know what has passed before you.

I really enjoy listening to people and turning their stories back out into a poem. It is one of the most exciting things that I am able to do.  It just took me a while to find it.

STF: That is certainly a dream come true and you are definitely making strides! You were recognized this month as an Oprah-approved poet, can you describe that feeling?

Azure: I was backstage after just getting off stage at the Minerva finale awards. I was catching up with Mrs. Shriver. There were 15 thousand people in the audience and millions watching live via webcast. And then about an hour later, after Oprah got off stage, she came out of security and looked at me and said, “You were amazing. Thank you,” and I just said, “You are welcome, Oprah Winfrey.” What do you say to that?

A month later one of the editors at Oprah said they wanted to interview me. And they asked if I was interested. I had to ask, “Do people ever tell you no?” The article came out and it was awesome! I cannot even say it was a dream come true because I don’t think I ever dreamt that. It was a wonderful surprise and a blessing.

I got signed to a national speaking agency after that and they have been wonderful in booking me all over the United States.

STF: When you are speaking all over the country, would you say there is a theme to the poetry you deliver? A common thread in what you speak about?

Azure: I speak about passion, telling your story, speaking to one another aside from technology. It was 2007 or 2008 when I was really confronted with how quickly things were moving. I sent my mother a text for Mother’s day. And she is the one who always taught me if you give people nothing else, you always get them a card. It is just taking the five minutes to write out a card and yet we mass text one another. And it is getting out control.

It’s the fact that we have gotten away from the basic human condition. Although we are able to multitask we have forgotten what handshakes feel like.

Especially when you go to dinner and everyone’s faces are illuminated by their electronic devices. I think the human condition is going viral.

STF: And so you use poetry to express these things, what is it about poetry that makes you so drawn to it?

Azure: Poetry has helped me to express myself. I love it as much as I do because there are not any rules. Especially with young women, they find they are constantly told that they are not enough and poetry doesn’t have those rules. It just wants you to express yourself.

Poets have a bad rap of being misunderstood but poetry can be relatable. I think the person who really got to me on that level was Maya Angelou. She really showed me that if you are going to love something, then leave your mark. And she has definitely left a mark with the world as we know it.

It is people like that who completely inspire me. You have to really be about something. Whether that’s accounting or cleaning the floor or painting, just be passionate about it.

STF: Well we are very excited to have you at the Young Women’s Leadership Network school in Brooklyn on the 19th of April! Are you able to give us a sneak peek of what to expect?

Azure: Sure! We are going to do a workshop for a couple hours and what I like to do is called free writing. I will give the girls a phrase or a slogan and its writing where your pen can’t leave the paper for 15 minutes. Then I will invite them to come up and read and soon everyone wants to share. It’s the sharing that is inspirational.

STF: We are looking forward to that! Throughout the weeks of our poetry campaign we are asking our followers and supporters to answer our Twitter prompts, “If the world was your classroom, what would you give a girl?” What do you think your answer would be to that question?

Azure: I would give her encouragement. I would give her affirmations. Tell her very simply that she is enough. I think that we don’t encourage each other enough. You get stuck in your own head and your rationale and sensibility and then we do nothing at all. And then the world misses out. You have to give whatever you have been given to the world or else the world will miss out.

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