In this interview, Kakenya Ntaiya talks about the freedom she has found in education. Tracing her path back to childhood, Kakenya remembers her family hardships and the constricting nature of traditional Maasai values on her future. But Kakenya was not going to accept her family’s selection of a husband-to-be for her at age five; and she was certainly not going to let generations of ritual and multiple father-figures with a limited perception of her potential stand in the way of her own dream. Instead, Kakenya – with the support of her mother – rallied together the very community that resented her independence and convinced them to send her to college in the US. Now, less than a year away from finishing her PhD in international education, Kakenya is still dreaming – but this time, for her entire village.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFSqhkxcb3c
Interview by: Kate Cummings. Location: Enoosaen, Kenya. Partner: Vital Voices, 2009.
Posted By Kate Cummings
Posted Sep 5th, 2009
1 Comment
Brooke Marchewka
February 8, 2010
Hello Ms. Cummings,
My name is Brooke Marchewka and I am a student at Masconomet Regional High
School in Boxford, Massachusetts. I have started a club at my school
which is working toward donating 100 XO laptops from the non-profit
organization One Laptop Per Child to students in Africa. I have recently
come into contact with Kakenya through a mutual contact from Kenya. Our
club (called the Global Initiative Volunteers Club) is now looking toward
donating the laptops to the girls at Kakenya’s Center for Excellence. We
hope to deliver the laptops to Kenya on a two-week long trip in February
2011.
I spoke on the phone with Kakenya and she suggested I contact you, as you
visited her school and you are from the U.S. I would love to speak with
you concerning your experience at the school. One of the largest hurdles
our club faces is having this trip to Kakenya’s Center for Excellence
approved by the School Committee. I would like to learn more about the
school and convince the committee that this is not a dangerous place to
visit.
Kakenya sent me a link to your blog for the Advocacy Project and I read
your profile about your accomplishments in photography as well as helping
others. I think what you are doing is wonderful. I hope to have the
opportunity to speak with you.
Sincerely,
Brooke Marchewka
President of the Global Initiative Volunteers (GIV) Club