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Imoro: Back to school at age 31

By Yakubu Memuna and Yahaya Huzeifa

“My husband looked at me as if I were a stranger and said, ‘Why should an illiterate woman like you be my wife? Go back to where you came from.’” I was 12 years old when my father decided to pull me out of school and give me up for marriage to the son of one of his friends. In marrying me off, he knew that he would receive a bride price, and that he would no longer be financially responsible for me.

My grandmother took me to a different community in an effort to protect me. For two years, all of my family members tried to convince my father that I was too young to marry, but my father married me off anyway, at the age of 14.

Within five years, I gave birth to three children. When I was 20 years old, my husband took a second wife, leaving me and my children to fend for ourselves. My children were ages two, three, and five. (more…)

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Mgata: When you educate a woman, you educate a community

This short film features Mgata, a teacher-mentor in a school in rural Tanzania who sees it as her mission to help any girl who is on the verge of dropping out of school. Her goal: to provide them with social and financial support, enabling them to finish school and become leaders in their community. (more…)

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KPFA Radio interview with one of Camfed’s first beneficiaries

Walter Turner, the host of KPFA Radio’s “Africa Today”, talks to Fiona Muchembere, one of Camfed’s first beneficiaries, about the manifold benefits of educating girls in rural Africa, and about the problems that arise for girls who are deprived of an education. Click on the play control below to listen to the interview.

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Guardian Development Journalism Competition

Guardian Development Journalism CompetitionCamfed is one of eight charities that is collaborating with the Guardian in the exciting new Guardian Development Journalism Competition, which launches on March 10, 2008.

The competition is open to UK-based students and freelance journalists with an interest in looking behind the headlines and investigating why 2.7 billion people around the world are still living in poverty. (more…)

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Donor Profile: A risky ascent for London’s Simon Edwards

Simon EdwardsWhen Simon Edwards, a corporate finance director for Evolution Securities in London, decided to climb Mt. Aconcagua, the highest peak in the Americas, his friends and associates were impressed with his ambition. Simon decided to capitalize on that—in an entirely virtuous way—by asking them to support his efforts by donating money to Camfed.

Simon’s interest in Camfed’s work stems from a personal connection to Tanzania, one of the countries where Camfed works. After university, he spent three months there working on an environmental project. He returned recently on business, 15 years later. “We drove through the countryside, and it struck me how little Tanzania has developed in the 15 years since I was there,” he says. “Tanzania has a place in my heart, so I wanted to do something to help.”

Education, he thought, would be the best way to create lasting change. “I believe that charity ought to create a virtuous cycle,” he says. “I like the idea that education feeds off itself. Countries with an educated population develop the capacity to help themselves.”

On January 21, Simon achieved what he had set out to accomplish: he reached the 22,840-foot summit of Mt. Aconcagua, one of three climbers in his original group of eight. “It was such a relief,” he says. “I broke down in tears at the top. I was ill two days before and didn’t think I was going to make it.”

Through his employer, Evolution Securities, as well as through an email he sent to 2,500 contacts soliciting donations for Camfed, Simon was able to raise £12,000—enough to fund an entire secondary school education for 40 girls. He was pleased by the response he received, but he’s still not entirely satisfied. “Now that I’ve made it back alive,” he says, “I plan to chase down a few more people.”

Make a donation

If you are inspired by Simon’s story, please give the gift of education to a child in Africa. Make a secure online donation today.

For more ideas on how to fundraise for Camfed, visit our get involved section.

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Press Release: Camfed selected as partner on Goldman Sachs global initiative to provide business education to underserved women

CAMFED SELECTED AS PARTNER ON GOLDMAN SACHS GLOBAL INITIATIVE TO PROVIDE BUSINESS EDUCATION TO UNDERSERVED WOMEN

Cambridge, U.K., March 6, 2008– The Campaign for Female Education (Camfed) and the University of Cambridge are delighted to be included in the first wave of partners in investment banking firm Goldman Sachs Group’s 10,000 Women initiative, which was announced on March 5th. The global initiative aims to unlock the economic potential of women in developing and emerging markets by providing high-quality business and management education to 10,000 underserved women around the world.

With funding from the Goldman Sachs initiative, Camfed, in conjunction with the University of Cambridge’s Judge Business School and Cambridge Assessment, will create two innovative certificate programmes for women high school graduates in rural Africa. The Starting Early, Moving up and Flying High program will work with educational institutions in Zambia to offer an unprecedented opportunity for 560 young African women to cultivate their business acumen.

“It is tremendously exciting to be part of this visionary initiative where so many esteemed academic institutions and entrepreneurs are coming together to create change,” said Ann Cotton, founder and Executive Director of Camfed.

“Because there is such high unemployment in rural Africa, women there must create their own opportunities. The Goldman Sachs initiative will help unleash African women’s tremendous creativity and energy, and transform them from job seekers to job creators.”

The first certificate programme designed by the Camfed-Cambridge partnership will cultivate basic business literacy with entrepreneurship and leadership development through an intensive summer residential programme for young women who have just graduated from high school.

The second certificate will be a part-time, two year programme for women who are employed or enrolled in post-secondary career training as nurses and teachers to augment their skills with financial management and entrepreneurial training. The program will also offer coaching, personal development and networking resources.

The Campaign for Female Education (Camfed) is an international nonprofit organization dedicated to fighting poverty and HIV/AIDS in rural Africa by educating girls and investing in their economic independence and leadership. Camfed began in 1993 by supporting 32 girls in rural Zimbabwe. In 2007, more than 408,000 children in some of the poorest regions of Zimbabwe, Zambia, Ghana and Tanzania benefited from Camfed’s education programme; 13,667 community members received business skills training; and 1,440 young women were supported to start their own enterprises. In 2008, Camfed will launch a programme in Malawi, and by 2010, it plans to expand to a total of seven countries.

Judge Business School is internationally recognised as one of the leading providers of innovative, intellectually challenging and practical business management education across a portfolio of undergraduate, graduate and executive programmes. As a fully integrated department of a world renowned university, Judge Business School hosts one of the largest concentrations of interdisciplinary business and management research activity in Europe. Ranked 10th in the 2008 FT Global Rankings of business schools , 7th in the 2007 Economist Intelligence Unit Global MBA Rankings, and 3rd in the 2007 Forbes Global Rankings for one year MBA programmes, the Cambridge MBA sits alongside the very best in the world. www.jbs.cam.ac.uk

The Cambridge Assessment Group, a non-profit organization, is Europe’s largest assessment agency. Cambridge Assessment Group incorporates three examination boards and is a department of the University of Cambridge. It is the Group’s objective to ensure learners across the world are able to access the benefits of their education through receiving fair and accurate assessment.

Goldman Sachs is a leading global investment banking, securities and investment management firm that provides a wide range of services worldwide to a substantial and diversified client base that includes corporations, financial institutions, governments, and high net-worth individuals. Founded in 1869, it is one of the oldest and largest investment banking firms. The firm is headquartered in New York and maintains offices in London, Frankfurt, Tokyo, Hong Kong and other major financial centres around the world.

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Contact:
Kimberley Sevcik
Media Relations Officer
Camfed
T: +415-979-1556
E: pr@camfed.org

Tim Holt
Deputy Head of Communications
University of Cambridge
T: +44-223-332300

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