Kakenya Ntaiya: Empower a girl, transform a community
Kakenya Ntaiya refused to accept the continued oppression of women in her Maasai village -- so she built a school that's shifting gender expectations in her community. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
I learned something much bigger.
you transform a community.
helping my mother cook, clean, farm
a very young age to be married.
that are used to perform FGM on girls.
the end of my childhood
in order to stay in school --
my community's support,
to repay that support.
when I went back to my village,
to men older than their fathers
when they're teenagers.
any more girls go through that.
to give back to my community.
and early marriage.
just how big this dream was,
could be the foundation --
I enrolled these 30 girls.
that are very traditional,
seemed excited to be there,
but they had no energy.
that a classroom was not enough.
and hungry from chores
raped and even kidnapped
could learn math or history,
and be well-nourished.
family in the community.
gone through FGM and already married,
when she heard about it.
and we enrolled her in my school.
was only just the start.
who already believed in her.
who dreams of becoming a pilot someday,
will follow in her footsteps.
the global economy trillions of dollars
is the doctor, the teacher,
will need in the future ...
lift out of poverty.
to go to university,
all by myself.
who helped me more than a decade ago.
if I was going to be successful.
with religious leaders, parents
and in the community
the support of the chief
the no-FGM policy in my school.
did not believe in the education of girls.
and brought her to enroll in my school,
to get Momposhi to believe in Linet, too.
of revealing Linet's grade
his daughter being promising as a student.
a strong relationship with his daughter --
as someone with full potential.
in one of the top national high schools
and how smart his daughter was.
to the new school himself.
had ever been to Nairobi.
at university in Australia --
advocate in the community.
in one of our training programs.
in the education of their own children.
are the proud keepers
and embrace our rich Maasai culture.
do story time with the girls,
our community remains connected.
mindset as their fathers before them?
called I'm Worth Defending:
led by Alfred and George.
a training program for boys and girls
about gender equality,
over 10,000 boys and girls and counting.
to make this kind of a dream come true.
have not gone through FGM
of women have been cut.
their cousins and their friends.
by the same, same community --
communities mean to Kenya?
from organizations
have the same opportunities,
like Enoosaen are thriving
that each daughter is a treasure,
see that value in herself.
to what that future will cost.
to my school will be a PhD,
will achieve her full potential
for her children
by what I learned from them
out of Enoosaen and back again.
dreaming and keep going
achieve their dreams
give every single woman
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kakenya Ntaiya - Educator and activistKakenya Ntaiya refused to accept the continued oppression of women in her Maasai village -- so she built a school that's shifting gender expectations in her community.
Why you should listen
Kakenya Ntaiya was set to follow the traditional path of girls born in the small village of Enoosaen, Kenya. Engaged at the age of 5, she was to participate in a female circumcision ceremony as a young teenager and then be married. But she had a different plan. First, she negotiated with her father and willingly agree to be circumcised -- only if he would allow her to finish high school. Later, when she was accepted to Randolph-Macon Women's College in Viriginia, she negotiated with her village elders to do what no girl had ever done before: leave her village to go to college in the United States.
She didn’t leave forever, though. Deeply proud of her heritage and of her community, Ntaiya returned to the village after school and worked with her elders to establish a school for girls there. The Kakenya Center for Excellence was established in 2009 with 32 students. A primary grade boarding school just for girls, the curriculum focuses on academics, leadership and female empowerment, along with cultural preservation and life skills. While families that can afford tuition do, Ntaiya also works with donors to provide scholarships for others.
In addition to her work with the school, Ntaiya is also a National Geographic emerging explorer.
Kakenya Ntaiya | Speaker | TED.com