Tag Archive | Malala Yousafzai

Postcards From Africa – Mission: Educate a Girl (EAG)

In this photo taken Monday, May 19, 2014, Solome Ishaya, sister of kidnapped school girls Hauwa Ishaya stands outside their family house in Chibok, Nigeria. More than 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped from a school in Chibok in Nigeria's north-eastern state of Borno on April 14. Boko Haram claimed responsibility for the act. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

In this photo taken Monday, May 19, 2014, Solome Ishaya, sister of kidnapped school girls Hauwa Ishaya stands outside their family house in Chibok, Nigeria. More than 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped from a school in Chibok in Nigeria’s north-eastern state of Borno on April 14. Boko Haram claimed responsibility for the act. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Summary

Educate a Girl (EAG), Nigeria, is about giving girls in need the ability to transform their lives, enter the workforce & have a voice in the media. $100 covers the entire vocational education in media studies for one girl in Nigeria, as well as further personal and professional grooming.

We strive to be transparent: we employ a world-class audit firm, document each girl’s education and connect her to her donor. Join us in not only educating 1 girl, but 500 in Nigeria!

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Postcards From Africa #18: Celebrating Ola Orekunrin, 29-year-old trauma Doctor and Helicopter Pilot, and Founder of Flying Doctors Nigeria.

This post was culled from the Facebook page of “A Might Girl (https://www.facebook.com/amightygirl)
A Mighty Girl is the world’s largest collection of books, toys, and movies for parents, teachers, and others dedicated to raising smart, confident, and courageous girls. Visit us at http://www.amightygirl.com, Pinterest (amightygirl), & Twitter (@amightygirl)

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Ola-Orekunrin TED FellowWhen Ola Orekunrin was a 22-year-old medical student in the UK, her 12-year-old sister became critically ill while visiting relatives in Nigeria.

With no medical facility nearby that could treat her condition, the family attempted to arrange an air evacuation. Orekunrin was shocked to discover that not only was no air ambulance available in Nigeria, there was not one available in the whole of West Africa:

“The nearest one at the time was in South Africa. They had a 12-hour activation time so by the time they were ready to activate, my sister was dead.” It was then, she explains, “I started thinking about whether I should be in England talking about healthcare in Africa, or I should be in Africa dealing with healthcare and trying to do something about it.”

Flying Doctors of NigeriaMotivated by her sister’s death and the desire to help others with minimal access to trauma care, Orekunrin left a promising medical career in the UK to found West Africa’s first air ambulance service, Flying Doctors Nigeria.

Now a 29-year-old trauma doctor and helicopter pilot, Orekunrin’s fleet of airplanes and helicopters have airlifted hundreds of people from remote areas to hospitals.

“From patients with road traffic trauma, to bomb blast injuries to gunshot wounds, we save lives by moving these patients and providing a high level of care en route,” Orekunrin says.

“I wanted to find a way that I can facilitate people who were critically ill,” she says. “Get them to see a doctor, and not just any doctor — I wanted to facilitate getting the right patient to the right facility, within the right time frame for that particular illness.”

In addition to the distance to health care facilities, there are many other challenges in the region that make air transport critical: “Many of our roads are poorly maintained, so emergency transport by road during the day is difficult. At night, we have armed robbers on our major highways; coupled with poor lighting and poor state of the roads themselves, emergency transport by road is deadly for both patients and staff.”

With 20 aircraft and 44 doctors on staff, Orekunrin is proud of her accomplishments, but sees much more room to improve the state of medical care in Nigeria: “Eighty percent of the world trauma occurs in low-middle income countries just like Nigeria. I feel there should be more focus on the trauma epidemic that Africa currently faces… I want to achieve a proper use of the healthcare sector in Nigeria.”

For her impressive accomplishments and determination to fill a critical social need, Dr. Orekunrin was named one of the World Economic Forum’s 2013 Young Global Leaders, the organization’s prestigious group of the world’s top leaders under the age of 40.

To learn more, check out this story in The Guardian at http://bit.ly/1qxkijZ or listen to her TED talk on women in business at http://bit.ly/1LMuflj. You can also check out the Flying Doctors Nigeria website at http://flyingdoctorsnigeria.com/

If your Mighty Girl dreams of flying one day or you’re looking for more stories about women pilots, check out our recent blog post, “Mighty Careers: I Want To Be A Pilot!” for girl-empowering books, toys, and clothing at http://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=6249

To introduce children and youth to another famous pilot who changed the world, visit our “Amelia Earhart Collection” at http://www.amightygirl.com/…/historical-char…/amelia-earhart

For more stories about inspiring women doctors and scientists for children and teens, visit http://www.amightygirl.com/boo…/history-biography/biography…

And, for pretend play toys for the budding doctors in your life, visit our “Pretend Play Occupations” section and choose your occupation of interest on the left menu at http://www.amightygirl.com/t…/imaginative-play/pretend-play…

 

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Postcards From Africa is a WWN Feature about creating a new, positive, empowering narrative of Africa by Africans. This is a movement about igniting an empowered citizenry to make a difference by bridging the integrity gap. It is about changing the status quo, from waiting passively for ‘leaders’, to our embracing a new paradigm that WE are the leaders we seek.

WWN seeks to advance ideas, causes, projects that transform our communities for the better, by first inspiring us to ‘see’ ourselves in a brand new light. We are committed to empowering and/or celebrating a new generation of Transformational, Ethical and Creative African leaders (T.E.C), who are actively engaged in nation-building, one idea, one person, one project and one community at a time!

Do you know anyone, idea or cause that should be featured? We’d love to hear from you: info@wholewomannetwork.com

Postcards From Africa #8: Remembering Chibok Girls! 365 Days Later, Malala writes a heartfelt Letter to them.

Malala

“I want to say to the world you must invest in education because it is very important.

If the new generation is not given pens, they will be given guns by the terrorists.” ~Malala Yousafzai

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