http://www.npr.org/2014/09/03/345428539/u-s-program-helps-africans-learn-entrepreneurial-skills
David Greene talks to Enitan Kuku, who's from Nigeria, and
Mildred Apenyo, who's from Uganda, about a U.S. State Department
entrepreneurial fellowship for young leaders from Africa.
Copyright © 2014 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.
DAVID GREENE, HOST:
Over
the past couple months, we have been looking at youth unemployment.
Here in the United States we have heard from college grads working odd
jobs because they just haven't been able to find full-time work in their
fields of study. Now it's the same for many young people in European
countries, but in Africa it is a different experience. Not finding a job
can be just one of many challenges.
Roughly 70 percent of
young people in Africa live on less than $2 a day. And financial
desperation and a sense of hopelessness have led to increased violence
and, in some countries, a temptation to join militant groups. One
U.S.-funded program called the Mandela Washington Fellowship is aimed at
developing young leaders in Africa. And this summer, 25 fellows spent
time at the University of Notre Dame looking for ways to help themselves
and their home countries.
In much of Africa, there is little
industrialization - fewer companies. And so it's not just about fewer
available jobs. There are just fewer jobs. And that makes
entrepreneurship - doing something to make money on your own - a much
more important option.
MILDRED APENYO: Our trajectory is not
going to become, like, super industrialized fast. It's not going to
follow what has happened, say, in the U.S. We are jumping certain steps
and innovating. People are heavily bootstrapping back home. Things are
going to definitely be different about, you know, the way Africa
develops.
GREENE: That's the voice of Mildred Apenyo. She's a
young entrepreneur from Uganda. She and another fellow in the Notre Dame
program, Enitan Kuku form Lagos, Nigeria, came into our studios to talk
about their experiences starting their own businesses back home.
Enitan's
country, Nigeria, has a population of about 170 million people. And
right now, nearly a quarter of them are unemployed. Enitan said she sees
many people with the potential for self-employment on the streets of
Lagos.
ENITAN KUKU: On Third Mainland Bridge, driving in the
rain, I see people offering to sell me gala - like, sausage rolls - on
the street of Lagos. It's raining. The bridge is like 30 minutes long by
driving. So by walking - and you see these guys walking from the edge
of the bridge to the other in the rain - in the sun. Sometimes I feel
like crying because I say, how do these guys survive every day? There is
hunger in people to actually earn a living. They don't have a job. So
we just have to structure the old business model around entrepreneurship
to say that is the next future for Africa.
GREENE: Now, these
two women who came to our studios admit that their cases are not
typical. They feel fortunate to have more resources than many people,
but they hope that their experiences starting businesses can set an
example for everyone. Enitan in Nigeria works for a multinational
company by day. When she's off, she is running her own organization
helping young artisans turn their skills and income.
KUKU: I
have a picture in my mind. His name is Dili (ph). He wakes up every day,
goes to the farm with his parents. He's very skilled at making
decorative arts and crafts. I've never seen anybody as good as this guy
before. And I got the opportunity of going to the community one day, and
I met him. I was like, oh, guy, this is so cool. A lot of people will
pay huge money to sell this. And he said I've never sold it before in my
life. And I'm like, really? This is so cool. Like, I'm going to make a
business model around this.
And I spoke with a couple of my
friends, and I said guys, we can actually give back to the society
through this. Let's open up a platform where we actually move a product
from the rural communities into the city. And we started with Dili's
community, and now I am working with over six communities, which is
really, really something I'm proud.
GREENE: That's the business
that Enitan started, and she says Dili has gone from making less than
$30 a month to making $600 a month.
Now, Mildred Apenyo in
Uganda is tackling a different problem altogether. She has opened a
fitness center that teaches women self-defense skills.
APENYO:
The biggest issue for me was how can I give women the tools to help them
be a little less vulnerable to molestation - to rape. I don't think
that many women are looking at being black belts, but what they can have
is a fighting chance - just a couple of skills to have another belt if
something ever happens.
GREENE: Mildred told us that at first, she herself lacked the know-how to build a sustainable business.
APENYO:
I know what questions to ask, and I'm not ashamed of asking. This other
shame of not knowing things - I thought, like, if I asked questions,
people would look at me and say, so why are you beginning a business
when you know so little?
GREENE: And this is one of her goals
when she returns home to Uganda. She wants to help other young women
overcome the shame and the feeling of certainty if they want to start
their own business.
Now, Enitan is returning home to Nigeria
with hope that is tempered by the reality that her country has been
going through a lot. Fears of an Ebola outbreak and the horrifying
abduction of hundreds of schoolgirls by an extremist group.
KUKU:
I love my country so much. And I know we have challenges. I know we
have problems. But I see the opportunities in that country, and it is my
responsibility to give back. If you see an opportunity, you have to go
after it. What happens after that? If it doesn't work out, fine. If it
works out, fine, but try. Make an attempt and try. If you try, whatever
happens, it will be story for you to tell at the end of the day, whether
good or bad.
GREENE: And those are the stories of Enitan Kuku
from Nigeria and Mildred Apenyo from Uganda. Both young women are
entrepreneurs. They have been in the United States on a fellowship
program and came by our studios to talk.
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