Hongera Nelly Cheboi - 2022 CNN Hero of the Year!

mzeiya

Elder Lister
There's always more than enough reason to whine, pout and drown in misery.

However, there are as many wonderful and inspirational stories despite what our prejudices and negative media would rather have us believe. And on a day like this, where we celebrate being a Republic for the 59th time, how apt then is it that a daughter of the soil and an extraordinary Kenyan just bagged an award coveted globally..

Congratulations and if you can, watch this vid and you will end up brimming with pride.

______________________
Nelly Cheboi, who creates computer labs for Kenyan schoolchildren, is CNN’s Hero of the Year

By Tricia Escobedo and Allie Torgan, CNN

http://edition.cnn.com/2022/12/11/world/gallery/cnn-heroes-2022/index.html
Cheboi’s nonprofit, TechLit Africa, has provided thousands of students across rural Kenya with access to donated, upcycled computers — and the chance at a brighter future.

Cheboi accepted the award with her mother, who she said “worked really hard to educate us.” At the beginning of her acceptance speech, Cheboi and her mother sang a song onstage that she explained had a special meaning when she was growing up.
As CNN Hero of the Year, Cheboi will receive $100,000 to expand her work. She and the other top 10 CNN Heroes honored at Sunday’s gala all receive a $10,000 cash award and, for the first time, additional grants, organizational training and support from The Elevate Prize Foundation through a new collaboration with CNN Heroes. Nelly will also be named an Elevate Prize winner, which comes with a $300,000 grant and additional support worth $200,000 for her nonprofit.

“The world is your oyster when you are educated”
Cheboi grew up in poverty in Mogotio, a rural township in Kenya. “I know the pain of poverty,” said Cheboi, 29. “I never forgot what it was like with my stomach churning because of hunger at night.”A hard-working student, Cheboi received a full scholarship to Augustana College in Illinois in 2012. She began her studies there with almost no experience with computers, handwriting papers and struggling to transcribe them onto a laptop.

Everything changed in her junior year, though, when Cheboi took a programming course required for her mathematics major.
“When I discovered computer science, I just fell in love with it. I knew that this is something that I wanted to do as my career, and also bring it to my community,” she told CNN.

Many basic computer skills were still a steep learning curve, however. Cheboi remembers having to practice touch-typing for six months before she could pass a coding interview. Touch-typing is a skill that is now a core part of the TechLit curriculum.
“I feel so accomplished seeing kids that are 7 years old touch-typing, knowing that I just learned how to touch-type less than five years ago,” she said.
Once she had begun working in the software industry, Cheboi soon realized the extent of which computers were being thrown away as companies upgraded their technology infrastructure.
http://edition.cnn.com/videos/enter...sofia-carson-diane-warren-performance-vpx.cnn
“We have kids here (in Kenya) — myself included, back in the day — who don’t even know what a computer is,” she said.
So, in 2018, she began transporting donated computers back to Kenya — in her personal luggage, handling customs fees and taxes herself.
https://kenyanlist.net/javascript:void(0)
“At one point, I was bringing 44 computers, and I paid more for the luggage than I did for the air ticket,” she said.
A year later, she co-founded TechLit Africa with a fellow software engineer after both quit their jobs. The nonprofit accepts computer donations from companies, universities and individuals.

The hardware is wiped and refurbished before it’s shipped to Kenya. There, it’s distributed to partner schools in rural communities, where students ages 4 to 12 receive daily classes and frequent opportunities to learn from professionals, gaining skills that will help improve their education and better prepare them for future jobs.
“We have people who own a specific skill coming in and are just inspiring the kids (with) music production, video production, coding, personal branding,” Cheboi said. “They can go from doing a remote class with NASA on education to music production.”

The organization currently serves 10 schools; within the next year, Cheboi hopes to be partnered with 100 more.
“My hope is that when the first TechLit kids graduate high school, they’re able to get a job online because they will know how to code, they will know how to do graphic design, they will know how to do marketing,” Cheboi said. “The world is your oyster when you are educated. By bringing the resources, by bringing these skills, we are opening up the world to them.”

 
I can't remember the exact quote but somebody once said something to this effect:

" To dominate a people, destroy their temples and grind their gods to dust. Define for them their heroes and their villains. Then you should have truly conquered them".

Back in the day when I was in the newsroom, CNN started awarding what they would call the "CNN African Journalist of the Year" award.

What we noticed after some time is that to win, you had to write 'authentic African' crap about hunger, HIV and fish-for-sex, female circumcision, the tribal sexual practices of the Samburu, etc. If you wrote an investigative piece say on the NSSF building, police brutality in Nairobi, the tea sector of Central Kenya or the international politics that made Nairobi the third UN capital, you would not even be shortlisted.

This bias for 'dark Africa' stories led many journalists across the continent, including in our newsroom, to boycot the award. CNN then effected some changes in the judging panel, injecting some token 'woke' Africans.

But the doctrine of the above quote remained, and still remains to this day.

I refuse my heroes and heroines to be chosen for me ..can KBC go to America to award some random people awards as heroes?
 
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I can't remember the exact quote but somebody once said something to this effect:

" To dominate a people, destroy their temples and grind their gods to dust. Define for them their heroes and their villains. Then you should have truly conquered them".

Back in the day when I was in the newsroom, CNN started awarding what they would call the "CNN African Journalist of the Year" award.

What we noticed after some time is that to win, you had to write 'authentic African' crap about hunger, HIV and fish-for-sex, female circumcision, the tribal sexual practices of the Samburu, etc. If you wrote an investigative piece say on the NSSF building, police brutality in Nairobi, the tea sector of Central Kenya or the international politics that made Nairobi the third UN capital, you would not even be shortlisted.

This bias for 'dark Africa' stories led many journalists across the continent, including in our newsroom, to boycot the award. CNN then effected some changes in the judging panel, injecting some token 'woke' Africans.

But the doctrine of the above quote remained, and still remains to this day.

I refuse my heroes and heroines to be chosen for me ..can KBC go to America to award some random people awards as heroes?
That's all nice and very moving but this is a global award.
1670838490824.png

I acknowledge that it's the in-thing to sound woke by eliciting emotions of true identity but Jeff won the African thingy, which did a lot of good for him until he messed up and had to come back. He's had a stellar career, no small part to the opportunity of him being a global voice.

Our recent lad, Larry Madowo started off at the BBC and is absolutely amazing now at CNN telling African stories with authenticity while making sure that representation isn't just a word in the newsroom. There are many others such Sophie Ikenye and I choose to celebrate those who go against the grain, and embrace globalization coz it's no longer 1954.

Also, the voting was online and open to anyone. Glad I cast mine for her.
 
That's all nice and very moving but this is a global award.
View attachment 81520
I acknowledge that it's the in-thing to sound woke by eliciting emotions of true identity but Jeff won the African thingy, which did a lot of good for him until he messed up and had to come back. He's had a stellar career, no small part to the opportunity of him being a global voice.

Our recent lad, Larry Madowo started off at the BBC and is absolutely amazing now at CNN telling African stories with authenticity while making sure that representation isn't just a word in the newsroom. There are many others such Sophie Ikenye and I choose to celebrate those who go against the grain, and embrace globalization coz it's no longer 1954.
Who gave Western institutions the mandate to choose the heroes and villains for the rest of the world? The Saudis, Russians and the Chinese have money too. Do you see them going around telling others who they should celebrate and who they shouldn't?

And let's not mix apples and tomatoes. Of course being employed by these neo-colonial institutions is lucrative. They have the money. Any body who gets a job there, good for them.

But there's a line. When CNN tries to use Madowo to promote the alphabet shit here I'll tell them to ferk off. It's not the business of a pro-American media outlet to tell Kenyans what is wrong or right, who is a hero or not. That's CULTURAL IMPERIALISM, period!
 
There's always more than enough reason to whine, pout and drown in misery.

However, there are as many wonderful and inspirational stories despite what our prejudices and negative media would rather have us believe. And on a day like this, where we celebrate being a Republic for the 59th time, how apt then is it that a daughter of the soil and an extraordinary Kenyan just bagged an award coveted globally..

Congratulations and if you can, watch this vid and you will end up brimming with pride.


Congrats Nelly
______________________
Nelly Cheboi, who creates computer labs for Kenyan schoolchildren, is CNN’s Hero of the Year

By Tricia Escobedo and Allie Torgan, CNN

http://edition.cnn.com/2022/12/11/world/gallery/cnn-heroes-2022/index.html
Cheboi’s nonprofit, TechLit Africa, has provided thousands of students across rural Kenya with access to donated, upcycled computers — and the chance at a brighter future.

Cheboi accepted the award with her mother, who she said “worked really hard to educate us.” At the beginning of her acceptance speech, Cheboi and her mother sang a song onstage that she explained had a special meaning when she was growing up.
As CNN Hero of the Year, Cheboi will receive $100,000 to expand her work. She and the other top 10 CNN Heroes honored at Sunday’s gala all receive a $10,000 cash award and, for the first time, additional grants, organizational training and support from The Elevate Prize Foundation through a new collaboration with CNN Heroes. Nelly will also be named an Elevate Prize winner, which comes with a $300,000 grant and additional support worth $200,000 for her nonprofit.

“The world is your oyster when you are educated”
Cheboi grew up in poverty in Mogotio, a rural township in Kenya. “I know the pain of poverty,” said Cheboi, 29. “I never forgot what it was like with my stomach churning because of hunger at night.”A hard-working student, Cheboi received a full scholarship to Augustana College in Illinois in 2012. She began her studies there with almost no experience with computers, handwriting papers and struggling to transcribe them onto a laptop.

Everything changed in her junior year, though, when Cheboi took a programming course required for her mathematics major.
“When I discovered computer science, I just fell in love with it. I knew that this is something that I wanted to do as my career, and also bring it to my community,” she told CNN.

Many basic computer skills were still a steep learning curve, however. Cheboi remembers having to practice touch-typing for six months before she could pass a coding interview. Touch-typing is a skill that is now a core part of the TechLit curriculum.
“I feel so accomplished seeing kids that are 7 years old touch-typing, knowing that I just learned how to touch-type less than five years ago,” she said.
Once she had begun working in the software industry, Cheboi soon realized the extent of which computers were being thrown away as companies upgraded their technology infrastructure.
http://edition.cnn.com/videos/enter...sofia-carson-diane-warren-performance-vpx.cnn
“We have kids here (in Kenya) — myself included, back in the day — who don’t even know what a computer is,” she said.
So, in 2018, she began transporting donated computers back to Kenya — in her personal luggage, handling customs fees and taxes herself.
https://kenyanlist.net/javascript:void(0)
“At one point, I was bringing 44 computers, and I paid more for the luggage than I did for the air ticket,” she said.
A year later, she co-founded TechLit Africa with a fellow software engineer after both quit their jobs. The nonprofit accepts computer donations from companies, universities and individuals.

The hardware is wiped and refurbished before it’s shipped to Kenya. There, it’s distributed to partner schools in rural communities, where students ages 4 to 12 receive daily classes and frequent opportunities to learn from professionals, gaining skills that will help improve their education and better prepare them for future jobs.
“We have people who own a specific skill coming in and are just inspiring the kids (with) music production, video production, coding, personal branding,” Cheboi said. “They can go from doing a remote class with NASA on education to music production.”

The organization currently serves 10 schools; within the next year, Cheboi hopes to be partnered with 100 more.
“My hope is that when the first TechLit kids graduate high school, they’re able to get a job online because they will know how to code, they will know how to do graphic design, they will know how to do marketing,” Cheboi said. “The world is your oyster when you are educated. By bringing the resources, by bringing these skills, we are opening up the world to them.”

 
And I do note your sneering, condescending tone. You have a right to it as I do my abrasive style.

But I will let you know this. I personally have a very low opinion of Bleks whose default position is to support the West. If by now any Blek doesn't know the West is intrinsically evil they need their heads checked.

Just two examples.

Who can invade a country, kill 1.5m people and then walk away like nothing happened?

Closer home, who can sit back to watch 1.4b people run the risk of dying from a respiratory fever even as they hoard billions of doses of vaccines, then immediately turn around and say 'we have a special relationship, thank God you didn't die, so and so is your hero, so and so your villain. We love you"?

Let's get serious some times...
 
I personally have a very low opinion of Bleks whose default position is to support the West.
Such a lame opinion. Coz nini inakuwasha when a Kenyan is happy for their fellow countryman winning. Damn, you're a grumpy sod.
Come with a new argument instead of such baseless allegations.
 
considers himself the defacto wikipedia on kalenjin. Ni kama yule mzee wetu hapa na wasapere!,
Hehe unajiweka kwa firing line pia?
Mzee wetu hapa leo mimi sielewi hasira ni ya nini. He's speaking facts yet this post was just meant to celebrate one of our own.
But tunakuelewa @Field Marshal. No love lost
 
Such a lame opinion. Coz nini inakuwasha when a Kenyan is happy for their fellow countryman winning. Damn, you're a grumpy sod.
Come with a new argument instead of such baseless allegations.
Again you go off on a tangent. On a personal level, it is good our gal won. She'll get some cash and somebody will boost her hasoo.

But you miss the point. We are talking on a general, macro level. Foreign entities with vested interests should never define our villains or heroes. Next utaona wakisema Audrey Mbugua is one of the greatest human rights defenders in Kenya, precisely because they use these type of things to advance cultural imperialism.

I don't know what's so difficult to understand here.
 
Again you go off on a tangent. On a personal level, it is good our gal won. She'll get some cash and somebody will boost her hasoo.

But you miss the point. We are talking on a general, macro level. Foreign entities with vested interests should never define our villains or heroes. Next utaona wakisema Audrey Mbugua is one of the greatest human rights defenders in Kenya, precisely because they use these type of things to advance cultural imperialism.

I don't know what's so difficult to understand here.
You're mixing too many issues. Doesn't mean what you're saying is wrong, I think context matters.

Just yesterday, you alluded that the plane crash this week that killed a man and his son in the Tsavo made you happy. Fair enough, we all get joy from different things. I enquired why you hate the white man so much and you explained about Lari and the injustices you saw first hand. Really harrowing tales that we should never forget.

Now, and I'm also guilty here of going on a tangent, I might not fully understand why we're supposed to hate the Caucasians with the same intensity as pre-independent times and I don't hold it against anyone who feels that way but really, this post, for the umpteenth time, wasn't supposed to be an argument about all that stuff. It would take days and days of debate and you'd be shocked how much you and I are on the same boat. So for the last time, this post is about Nelly Chemboi. End of.

Also, you point out that recently, the evil white man held onto vaccines hoping we would be wiped out yet you and I were among the first to get the Moderna shot at Karen Hospital. Am I invalidating your stance, no. Let's for a second assume that indeed they withheld vaccines and 2 years later, we still are bitter about that. Then, doesn't it speak more of our esteem as Africans that we still rely on as basic stuff such as live saving medication from them?

Why would I talk about this specifically? Well, at that same time, India was having thousands of fatalities daily but instead of blaming others, they got down to work and can now produce more vax than all other nations.

Senjor, we're in the information age and globalisation is a reality we can't ignore. Doesn't matter if someone is white, red, purple, green or whatever, we are in a new dispensation and their evil deeds should never be forgotten. Indeed, I would say I'm in the top 3 afrocentric Listers and will always advocate for us to remain fully aware of our history (that's why I never mourned the Queen's passing) and at the same time, realise that there is a better way to state our truth, our history, our culture etc without always making it a them vs us scenario.
 
You're mixing too many issues. Doesn't mean what you're saying is wrong, I think context matters.

Just yesterday, you alluded that the plane crash this week that killed a man and his son in the Tsavo made you happy. Fair enough, we all get joy from different things. I enquired why you hate the white man so much and you explained about Lari and the injustices you saw first hand. Really harrowing tales that we should never forget.

Now, and I'm also guilty here of going on a tangent, I might not fully understand why we're supposed to hate the Caucasians with the same intensity as pre-independent times and I don't hold it against anyone who feels that way but really, this post, for the umpteenth time, wasn't supposed to be an argument about all that stuff. It would take days and days of debate and you'd be shocked how much you and I are on the same boat. So for the last time, this post is about Nelly Chemboi. End of.

Also, you point out that recently, the evil white man held onto vaccines hoping we would be wiped out yet you and I were among the first to get the Moderna shot at Karen Hospital. Am I invalidating your stance, no. Let's for a second assume that indeed they withheld vaccines and 2 years later, we still are bitter about that. Then, doesn't it speak more of our esteem as Africans that we still rely on as basic stuff such as live saving medication from them?

Why would I talk about this specifically? Well, at that same time, India was having thousands of fatalities daily but instead of blaming others, they got down to work and can now produce more vax than all other nations.

Senjor, we're in the information age and globalisation is a reality we can't ignore. Doesn't matter if someone is white, red, purple, green or whatever, we are in a new dispensation and their evil deeds should never be forgotten. Indeed, I would say I'm in the top 3 afrocentric Listers and will always advocate for us to remain fully aware of our history (that's why I never mourned the Queen's passing) and at the same time, realise that there is a better way to state our truth, our history, our culture etc without always making it a them vs us scenario.
I will reply to this tirade before I sleep.
 
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