Tag: Kennedy Odede

  • Why Nelson Mandela Prize for Kenya’s Kennedy Odede

    Why Nelson Mandela Prize for Kenya’s Kennedy Odede

    Kenya’s Kennedy Odede was recognised at the annual commemoration by the United Nations (UN) General Assembly of Nelson Mandela International Day on 18 July, Nelson Mandela International Day.

    United Nations Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Prize is considered one of the most prestigious awards a person could get. It is inspiring and humbling that Odede has been considered worthy of the Nelson Mandela Prize.

    The award recognises the achievements of those who dedicated their lives to service of humanity as guided by the purposes and principles of the UN, while honouring and paying homage to Mandela’s extraordinary life and legacy of reconciliation, political transition and social transformation. It is awarded every five years and was first awarded in 2015, making Odede only the third person to receive the award.

    Nelson Mandela who passed away at age 95 years was a true legend if we consider what he was able to achieve in his lifetime. It is stunning and inspiring to see Odede honored as one with zeal, sacrifice and humility that the iconic Mandela demonstrated throughout his life.

    Odede has obviously earned the prize. He’s doing impressive and transformative work to make change – helping communities to climb out of poverty and giving people hope for a better future.

    The transformative figure, finds ingenious solutions including schools for the most vulnerable girls, training programs for men to combat domestic violence, safe houses for survivors, community libraries, employment programs, innovative clean-water kiosks, a community cooperative bank.

    Odede grew up in Kibera, Kenya’s largest slum and experienced poverty. At age 10, he was your typical Nairobi Street boy or as most people refer to them, “chokora”, “eater of garbage.” He was subsisting on my own, without basic services like education and healthcare.

    Although Odede experienced devastating realities of life and extreme poverty, he still dreamt of changing his life and community. He took up menial jobs to survive. In 2004, he took up a job in a factory earning the equivalent of $1 for 10 hours of work. He saved 20 cents and used that to buy a soccer ball to start Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO).

    Like many people in growing up in situation of lack in Kibera, Korogocho and Mathare among other areas, he has entrepreneurial spirit and that is how he started SHOFCO which has become the largest grassroots organisation in the slum. Today, SHOFCO impacts over 2.4 million people in Kenya.

    Since its founding, SHOFCO has implemented many life changing projects in different communities. SHOFCO implements a community-led approach to change, which has helped them to transform underprivileged communities.

    As Odede often says, meaningful change can be realized only if communities are involved, and sustainable change comes from giving people agency and investing in collaborative, community-driven solutions.

    Currently, SHOFCO operates in 40 of the 47 counties in Kenya, impacting over 4 million lives. Our programs focus on education, healthcare, water and sanitation, economic empowerment, community mobilization, and youth development.

    Through Shofco Urban Network (SUN), the organisation has brought together individuals and households through social groups run independently and organises them to actively seek tangible change in their community and society at large.

    Through the organisation’s two leadership academies for girls, SHOFCO is creating female leaders who have experienced life in slums and marginalization first-hand. The girls are nurtured to become advocates for their communities and ultimately change situations.

    The decision to award Kennedy Odede with Nelson Mandela Prize for his extraordinary efforts to transform vulnerable communities is praise worthy. Odede extraordinary example continues to inspire many people from marginalised areas and vulnerable communities. Odede has shown that no matter your background you can come up and do big things. That is why we are proud of him.

    Mr Obonyo is a Public Policy Analyst. Email: raphojuma@hotmail.com

  • 2025 Nelson Mandela Prize: ‘Find me unafraid’, a metaphor for human resilience

    2025 Nelson Mandela Prize: ‘Find me unafraid’, a metaphor for human resilience

    Life has an uncanny way of signifying the most unlikely event. Such is the inspirational story of a Kenyan who was born out of wedlock in rural Kenya, the firstborn son of a 15 year-old girl. The mother was ostracised for bringing into the family an “uninvited guest,” one who would in the fullness of time demand a piece of ancestral land. Confronted with this unbearable situation, the teenage mother decided to elope with another young man, and together they left the village to seek for greener pastures in the city, leaving behind her two-year old baby with the grandmother.

    In Nairobi, its Kibera slums that beckoned. At three, following the death of his grandmother, little boy Kennedy Odede, was picked by his mother from the village and brought to Kibera. This is where the boy was raised. Kennedy Odede, author of Find Me Unafraid, his memoir, which he co-authored with his wife Jessica Posner, tells the story of Kibera slums like no other writer has. The reader can touch the coarse texture of Kibera and feel its scales, the horror, the hopelessness, and the resilience, too. Here people love, care and hate. The title of the book is a metaphor for the spirit of human resilience. It is taken from a poem Kennedy says, that Nelson Mandela, one of his influences, introduced to him.

    Here is the first stanza of William Ernest Henley’s poem, Invictus:

    Out of the night that covers me
    Black as the pit from pole to pole
    I thank whatever gods may be
    For my unconquerable soul

    Find Me Unafraid is the memoir of a young Kenyan who survived the harsh conditions of slum and street life, to bring the story of the city’s underprivileged families, to the world. “In our Kibera neighbourhood, it was easy to know if people had food or not. You had to light your charcoal stove, a jiko, outside in the open air for the charcoals to catch fire. If you did not bring your stove outside to cook, you showed the neighbourhood the depth of your suffering,” writes Odede. In Kibera, there’s social stratification. There’s the poor, and there’re the poor of the poor. Odede’s family belonged to the lowest stratum, a family where biting poverty had secured an abode. The Odede’s slept hungry. The saving grace for little Odede came from a childhood friend next door whose mother loathed Odede’s family. Yet the boy did not mind his mother’s wrath. Often time, he sneaked morsels for his best friend. “Here,’ ‘said a voice, as an outstretched arm appeared offering a precious piece of bread.” Such was Odede’s childhood in the slums, deprived. Sometimes Odede would go to a parish for rations.

    When in 2004, Tanzanian-born diplomat Anna Tibaijuka was appointed Executive Director of UN-Habitat, she came up with the grand Kenya Slum Upgrading Programme, a joint project undertaken by the Kenya government and the United Nations. The aim was to address the harsh realities of slum life. After all, UN-Habitat is headquartered in Nairobi, and therefore it was only prudent that the UN agency pilots this programme in Kenya before taking it to the rest of the world. “Until then,” wrote journalist Rasna Warah, “few organisations, except charities and NGOs, paid much attention to the sprawling Kibera slums, where mud and tin shacks are stacked together like sardines.”

    In the slums, people are overcrowded, families share tiny ramshackles, piped water, electricity or proper sanitation are hard to come by. Here, flying bullets, stray or otherwise, are a part of life, and the threat of disease outbreaks and death, sits inside and outside these tenements, ominously.

    Find Me Unafraid is the story of a former slum kid and street boy who escaped the brutality of that harsh life and lived to tell the story as Colombian Nobel Laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez might have said in his memoir, Living to Tell the Tale. Odede’s is an evocative memoir. It is heartrending. It is “raw” as Odede told me in an interview on The Books Café. As the reader roams through the pages of this memoir, he is reminded that life in the slum is indeed brutal and short. Most of Odede’s childhood friends, did not survive teenage: they perished, including the boy who used to sneak bread him.

    Odede survived mob justice for “stealing” a mango from a Mama Mboga. This struggling woman only needed to shout, mwizi, thief, and the poor boy was cornered by a hungry and angry mob! A Catholic priest saved Odede by paying for the mango and went ahead to do some shopping for the family. Once when the boy was 10 and could no longer stand the terror of his alcoholic stepfather, daily beatings, and the poverty that surrounded his family in the slums, he escaped to try a new life on the streets of Nairobi. There, he was welcomed with a thorough beating because the street families could not trust him. They suspected he had been sent as an informer. An older boy who had earlier left Kibera slums for street life, and had been integrated, is the one who came to his rescue. But that was just the beginning of his troubles on the streets. Street families do not just wait for alms from well-wishers; the boys and girls on the street risk their lives every day, to provide for these families. It is the brutality of this life that pushes the street boy to criminal activities.

    L-R- Kennedy Odede and the The Books Café’s host Khainga O’Okwemba.
    L-R: Kennedy Odede and the The Books Café’s host Khainga O’Okwemba.

    “If a street boy comes to you, and asks for Ksh.20, who are you to judge and decide for him that he needs food? Give him the 20 shillings and let him use it the way he wants,” Odede told me in an interview. The street boy dares death every day. If he snatches a purse, if he gets away with a side mirror, a car stereo, or comes to you wielding a knife asking for something, he is ready to die, to be shot or by mob justice. Survival surprises the street boy! To him, the smartly dressed represent the bourgeoisie. Kennedy lived in Kibera slums for 23 years. It was through the daring and loving charm of a young American student, Jessica Posner, that Odede was admitted to an American university without having gone through formal education. One of his professors, hearing his remarkable story, encouraged him to enroll in a memoir writing class. And there, Find Me Unafraid, was born. Odede’s story is not only heartrending, and redemptive, it is a powerful romance story.

    Odede is the founder and executive director of SHOFCO (shining hope for communities), the transformative grassroots organisation he founded with fellow slum youth to change lives. For he does not wish any child to go through what he experienced growing up in Kibera.

    Kennedy Odede is the recipient of several global and local awards, including a Kenya Presidential Commendation. He was named 2024 TIME 100 Most Influential People and in 2023 he was named TIME 100 Impact Africa Award. Odede is the winner of the 2025 United Nations Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Prize for his outstanding community work, and as a transformative leader. Odede will be awarded on 18 July 2025 at the annual commemoration of the UN General Assembly Nelson Mandela International Day in New York. Kennedy Odede’s is an inspiring story: A boy who grew up in Kibera slums is today one of the most influential young leaders in the world, touching lives and transforming communities.

     Khainga O’Okwemba is the Presenter and Producer of The Books Café on KBC English Service.

  • Kenyan social entrepreneur, Canadian indigenous social worker awarded 2025 UN Mandela Prize

    Kenyan social entrepreneur, Canadian indigenous social worker awarded 2025 UN Mandela Prize

    Kenya’s Kennedy Odede, a former street child turned global changemaker, has been named one of the two 2025 laureates of the prestigious United Nations Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Prize.

    Odede, who founded Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO), was recognized for his transformative work uplifting millions of lives in Kenya’s urban slums through community-led development.

    He will receive the award during the Nelson Mandela International Day commemoration on 18 July at the UN Headquarters in New York alongside Brenda Reynolds, a social worker of Saulteaux heritage supporting the health and well-being of Indigenous communities in Canada.

    Secretary-General António Guterres will award the honorary prizes, alongside President of the 79th session of the General Assembly, Philémon Yang, as part of the annual commemoration marking Nelson Mandela International Day on 18 July 2025 under the theme of It’s still in our hands to combat poverty and inequality.

    “As the United Nations celebrates 80 years, Nelson Mandela’s legacy of reconciliation and transformation continues to inspire and drive us,” Secretary-General António Guterres said.

    “This year’s Mandela prize winners embody the spirit of unity and possibility reminding us how we all have the power to shape stronger communities and a better world.”

    General Assembly President Philémon Yang, who chaired the 2025 Selection Committee, said: “The 2025 UN Nelson Mandela Prize not only honors the legacy of Madiba, but affirms that the spirit of multilateralism lives through the tireless efforts of its laureates two individuals whose lives reflect the courage to lead, the humility to serve, and the vision to unite across borders.”

    The winners were selected from 331 nominations received for candidates in 66 Member States.

    Kennedy Odede, SHOFCO CEO

    Today, SHOFCO impacts more than 2.5 million people each year in Kenya by organizing and strengthening community groups across 68 sites and fostering partnerships to deliver essential services to support them.

    “I am so humbled. This award is not about me it is about the power of communities, and the trust put in local leadership,” said Odede. “Nelson Mandela taught us that dignity and justice begin from the ground up. This recognition affirms what we believe at SHOFCO: the answers to poverty and inequality already exist within the people most affected.”

    Odede was also recognized with the UN Habitat Scroll of Honor award in 2021.

    At the July ceremony, the winners will receive a glass trophy engraved with a quote from Nelson Mandela: “What counts in life is not the mere fact that we have lived. It is what difference we have made to the lives of others.”

    Brenda Reynolds social worker of Saulteaux heritage

    Brenda Reynolds is a Status Treaty member of the Fishing Lake Saulteaux First Nation, in Saskatchewan, Canada known for her development of the Indian Residential School Resolution Health Support program under the Indian Residential Settlement Agreement and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

    “I speak two languages, yet words fail to express my deep gratitude and surprise at receiving the UN Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Prize. I am truly humbled. Mandela, a figure I’ve long admired for his work in reconciliation and against apartheid, recognized the parallels between his homeland and the struggles of Indigenous peoples. I have always felt a deep kinship with him,” said Brenda Reynolds upon learning she was one of the two 2025 Laureates.

    Committee

    In accordance with Article 4 (1) of the Statute, the Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Prize recipients are selected by a selection committee. In 2025, the Committee was comprised of: Chair of the Committee Philémon Yang, President of United Nations General Assembly’s seventy-ninth session, African Group Osama Mahmoud Abdelkhalek Mahmoud, Permanent Representative of Egypt to the United Nations; Asia-Pacific Group Jamal Fares Alrowaiei, Permanent Representative of Bahrain to the United Nations and Eastern European Group Krzysztof Maria Szczerski, Permanent Representative of Poland to the United Nations.

    Others are Latin American and Caribbean Group Mutryce Agatha Williams, Permanent Representative of Saint Kitts and Nevis to the United Nations, Western European Group and other States Elina Kalkku, Permanent Representative of Finland to the United Nations and Ex-officio member of the Committee Mathu Joyini, Permanent Representative of South Africa to the United Nations.

    Four Eminent Individuals were selected to serve as honorary members of the Committee in an advisory capacity in accordance with Article 4 (2) of the Statute: Marcella A. Liburd, Governor General of the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis, Tarja Halonen, former President of the Republic of Finlan, Mohamed Mostafa ElBaradei, Nobel Laureate, former Vice President of Egypt and Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as well as Elżbieta Mikos-Skuza, senior lecturer at the Faculty of Law, University of Warsaw, Poland.

    The UN Department of Global Communications served as the Secretariat of the Committee.

    Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Prize

    The United Nations Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Prize is an honorary award established by General Assembly resolution 68/275 of 6 June 2014.

    Its statute was approved by General Assembly resolution 69/269 of 2 April 2015.

    The Prize is presented once every five years as a tribute to the outstanding achievements and contributions of two individuals, one female and one male Laureate, who shall not be selected from the same geographic region.

  • Odede hailed for life-changing community services in Nyanza

    Odede hailed for life-changing community services in Nyanza

    Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO) Founder and CEO Dr Kennedy Odede has been hailed for his community services that have uplifted the lives of Nyanza region residents.

    Speaking during his coronation as Luo Council of Elders Deputy Chairman on Saturday in Rarieda, James Ayaga said through SHOFCO, Dr. Odede has rehabilitated several water pans, offered scholarships to students, distributed maize seeds, and launched several youth and women empowerment programs in Kisumu, Homa Bay, Siaya and Migori counties.

    “What our son Odede has done in this region is commendable. I’m calling on all residents of Nyanza region including political leaders to support and allow him to roll out programs that can change the lives of our people,” Ayaga said.

    The deputy chair further said he has seen what Dr Odede has done in Nairobi after he visited SHOFCO sites earlier this year.

    “I have seen what he has done in Nairobi and it’s not only there; he is changing lives across Kenya. Odede is our son. We want to welcome him home and support him in whatever he does because he is doing great things,” he added.

    At the same time, Ayaga thanked Dr. Odede for the support he accorded him during installation preparations.

    “I love him (Odede) because he respects and supports our community traditions,” he stated.

    In a statement delivered by SHOFCO Urban Network (SUN) Kisumu County Chairman Allan Metho, Dr Odede underscored the value of embracing culture and tradition, saying it has helped bring the community together.

    “Our culture and tradition are important and we should write them down for the future generation to read.

    “Preserving our culture is essential for fostering identity, diversity, and community cohesion. It enriches the lives of our people and contributes to a more vibrant and inclusive society,” Dr. Odede stated.

    In June, 40 elders led by Ayaga installed Dr. Odede as a Luo elder saying despite his young age, the SHOFCO boss has done a lot for the community.

    The SHOFCO boss was in Siaya to launch a new 3-storey community centre in bid to scale up his empowerment activities in the county.

    The new centre hosts women and youth empowerment programs, the key among them are a school library, tailoring floor, gender office, a community hall, and computer lab.

    “We want to create opportunities for our youth and women. We need to equip them for the job market, prepare them to do business and make them become people who can be the voice of reason in their communities,” Dr Odede said during the launch.

    The coronation came two months after the SHOFCO founder met Luo Council of Elders Chairman Ker Odungi Randa at his home in Nyando, Kisumu County.

    During the meeting, Ker Randa said Dr. Odede has done a lot for Kenya and he deserves to be appreciated.

    “I have been looking for you. I’m happy to see you today and I bless the work of your hands,” Ker told Odede.

    The installation of Ayaga as Luo Council of Elders Deputy Chair was attended by several political leaders led by Rarieda MP Otiende Amollo.

  • Kennedy Odede selected for prestigious TIME’s TIME100 Impact Awards

    Kennedy Odede selected for prestigious TIME’s TIME100 Impact Awards

    Kenyan philanthropist Dr Kennedy Odede is among eminent African personalities selected for the TIME’s TIME100 Impact Awards set to take place in Kigali, Rwanda on November 17.  The star-studded Awards honor the continent’s leading change makers.

    The Shining Hope for Communities (Shofco) founder and CEO will be feted at the ceremony which recognises leaders from across the world who are driving change in their communities.

    Dr. Odede is being awarded for the community-driven change, championed by Shofco, that has now become a model for global NGOs.

    Founded in 2004 by Dr Odede as a way of uplifting his community after growing up in poverty in Kibera slums, Shofco is now a grassroots movement that has impacted over 2.5 million slum dwellers in Kenya through various causes such access to health, water, community advocacy platforms, education, and sustainable livelihoods program.

    The oldest of eight children, Dr. Odede experienced extreme poverty and violence, became a street boy aged 10 and later joined a gang.

    All these are not things you associate with a change maker but this is exactly what Dr. Odede later became.

    Having struggled to access water in the slums where clean and safe piped water was non-existent, Odede put provision of this basic commodity on top of his wish list when Shofco came into being.

    “We used to walk several kilometres to get water and most of the time, we would suffer water-borne diseases because the water we got was contaminated due to the underground pipes getting mixed up with raw sewage,” Odede told CNN in a past interview.

    It is for this reason that Shofco used a cutting-edge aerial piping system when installing a water treatment facility in the slum which can pump up to 300,000 litres of water at a time to aerial pipes that connect to various water kiosks throughout Kibera and Mathare.

    With the water going to various kiosks stationed at strategic points across the slums, members of this community are now not walking several kilometres in search of the precious commodity, all thanks to Dr. Odede.

    Women’s education is also close to his heart and after witnessing a lot of gender inequality in the slum, he founded two tuition-free schools for girls in Kibera and Mathare slums.

    So far, the school in Kibera, which has over 500 pupils, has had students sit for KCPE since 2017 while in Mathare, there are nearly 400 students from pre-primary to Grade 7.

    The Kibera School for Girls is now a consistent top performer, ranked among the top 10 in Nairobi, with graduates going on to attend high schools in Kenya and the United States.

    Shofco has also spread its wings beyond Nairobi as every year, over 500 needy students from Mombasa, Nakuru, Uasin Gishu and Kisii counties who score more that 300 marks receive scholarships.

    Odede’s efforts do not end there. Shofco has seven clinics in the slums that attend to over 700 people in the community at near-zero cost after decades of struggling to access medical care due to its high cost.

    He also initiated the Shofco Urban Network (SUN), a grassroots movement that brings together individuals and households through social groups, a key pillar of the ogransation that ensures community-driven change is achieved.

    There are over three million SUN members in Kenya with over 1.5 beneficiaries. SUN has created a self-sustaining group savings and loans programme for the members and their immediate families with over 300,000 active saving groups.

    One such programme is the highly-successful Shofco Savings and Credit Cooperative Society (Sacco) which draws its over 17000 membership from Kibera, Mathare, Kawangware as well as slums in Mombasa, Kisumu and Kakamega.

    Shofco Sacco has given out over Ksh600 million in loans since its inception five years ago which go to small businesses, self-help groups and the youth to start or boost income-generating activities.

    As of September 2023, Shofco also launched an ambitious five-year programme to enroll 2.2 million young people in Technical and Educational Vocation Training (TVET) institutions across Kenya and to provide business training and grants to nearly 50,000 by end of 2024 in Nairobi County.

    These efforts have not gone unnoticed as Dr. Odede has been named a Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum, an Obama Foundation Africa Leader, a USAID Advisory Board member, and the winner of the Mohammed Ali Humanitarian Award among others.

    He is also the co-author of New York Times bestseller, Find Me Unafraid: Love, Loss, and Hope in African Slum. The TIME100 Impact Awards, therefore, is another feather on Odede’s cap.

    He will be awarded alongside UN Women Goodwill Ambassador Danai Gurira, social justice humanitarian Ashley Judd, United Nations’ IFAD Advocate for Rural Youth Sherrie Silver, former Liberia President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, and African Leadership Group founder Fred Swaniker.

     

  • Rapper Abich crowned the winner of TAMBUA! Talent Showcase

    Rapper Abich crowned the winner of TAMBUA! Talent Showcase

    The fast-rising artist Levis Omondi popularly known as Abich emerged the winner of first edition of TAMBUA! Talent Showcase held on Saturday at the Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO) School for Girls Auditorium in Kibra.

    Abich beat a strong field of participants in an event that attracted a significant interest bringing together 25 acts representing the entire spectrum of music,from singers and rappers to MCs,DJs,dancers among others.

    The event was organised by founder and CEO of SHOFCO which is also Kenya’s largest grassroots movement, and one of Africa’s most esteemed social entrepreneurs and community organisers Kennedy Odede.

    Founder and CEO of SHOFCO Kennedy Odede[/caption]

    Odede known for his award-winning work to localise aid and direct resources and decision-making power to local community organisations said this is the start of big things to come for local artists especially coming from the humble backgrounds in Nairobi.

    “TAMBUA! Is a talent platform that has been launched by the community advocacy organisation to create opportunities for the next generation of music stars in Kenya.This is not just going to be a one off showcase but would be a sustainable platform for emerging generation of talent going to selected neighbourhoods in Nairobi, particularly those that are economically disadvantaged and creating opportunities for the young artists to be mentored by some of the most established professionals in the music business” read part of SHOFCO statement

    Nominated senator Gloria Orwoba who graced the occasion lauded SHOFCO for organizing an initiative which she said had been embraced by the locals,a move geared towards furthering community development amongst the young talents.

    The vibrant politician well known for her advocacy of Menstruation Hygiene Care said as someone who has been involved in promoting the arts, she recognised the high standards of performance and encouraged the young artists to keep working on their craft

    Senator Orwoba awards First Runner Up rapper Barbara Cloe

    “I had such a good time at Kibera this afternoon where I attended the ‘Tambua showcase’, a music skills development and mentorship program sponsored by Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO).We have a lot of hidden talent in our communities and especially with our youth. Thank you Kibera for inviting me to be part of this initiative!” she posted on her official online handles.

    Kenyan hip-hop and rap artist who has taken East Africa by storm Henry Ohanga aka Octopizzo having grown up in the slums of Kibra on his part challenged the artists to be disciplined in their music engagements and stay focused if they have to achieve desirable results.

    “Though the music industry offers great economic opportunities , it takes at least 5 years to be able to establish your brand and earn a livelihood from your music. Therefore it is important to have alternative revenue streams when you start your music career” disclosed the renowned rapper well known for his 2007 ‘Namba Nane’ hit song

    Others who attended the highly publicised and packed event were multitalented entertainer Antony Mwangi christened Anto Neosoul and bubbly radio/TV presenter,entertainer and Endometriosis awareness champion Jahmby Koikai.

    Crowd chering contestants

    Others include veteran music producer and founder of ketebul Music Tabu Osusa who gave a global perspective using the illustration of musicians from the DRC and the Japanese nyatiti player Ericko Mukoyama (Anyango Nyar Japan), to challenge the artists to harness the diversity of rhythms in Kenya and give them a contemporary twist that stand out on a global platform.

    He warned them that Artificial Intelligence could now produce singers and so it was important to have a unique skill such as playing a traditional instrument that technology cannot replicate.

    Winners were awarded various cash prizes courtesy of main event organiser Odede and Senator Orwoba who was the main guest of the event and also doubled as a mentor to the young performers

    The next edition scheduled for Korogocho early November this year will be in partnership with the multi award winning youth advocate at the national, regional and international levels Raphael Obonyo who grew up in the third-largest slum in the capital, Nairobi, where people live in grinding poverty.

  • SHOFCO launches TAMBUA, a music skills development & mentorship program

    SHOFCO launches TAMBUA, a music skills development & mentorship program

    The next generation of music stars in Kenya is set to benefit from a talent platform dubbed TAMBUA.

    The platform which was Saturday launched by the community advocacy organization, Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO) is a skills discovery and development targeting untapped talent among the youth in different urban communities in Kenya, starting with Kibera.

    “Talent is universal but opportunities are not. Tambua is creating unique opportunities for the youth and giving them a chance to succeed,” says Kennedy Odede, CEO of SHOFCO.

    Speaking during the launch of the platform, Odede said that there was an overwhelming response to a call sent out in August 2023 for artists based in Kibera to register for the event.

    “During the showcase held at the SHOFCO School for Girls Auditorium, we saw 25 acts representing the entire spectrum of music, from singers and rappers to MCs, DJs and dancers and even paint artists.”

    Each of the artists was allocated 3 minutes for a performance before a jury consisting of respected music industry professionals. They were evaluated on musical quality, songwriting, authenticity, style, confidence, stage presence, and their ability to connect with the audience.

    The top three outstanding acts were then promised career-changing opportunities including being mentored by some of the most successful music producers in the country. The mentors include Grammy-nominated group Jabali Afrika, internationally renowned rapper Octopizzo, who grew up in the area where SHOFCO is located, and Tabu Osusa, Executive Director & Founder Ketebul Music.

    The winners will be guided on shaping their musical identity, writing and production, video direction and building a sustainable brand.

    The event also featured influential personalities who shared their experiences with the young artists and offered professional and personal insights on career, determination, discipline and success.

    The special guests for the event were Nominated Senator Gloria Orwoba, John Andrews, General Manager, Universal Music Kenya, the iconic motor rally driver Patrick Njiru, Jahmby “Fyah Mummah” Koikai, broadcaster and MC, and Raphael Obonyo, convener of the Youth Congress and singer, actor and broadcaster Anto Neosoul.

  • US Senator Chris Coons meets SHOFCO’s founder Odede

    US Senator Chris Coons meets SHOFCO’s founder Odede

    United States Senator from Delaware Chris Coons held a sideline meeting with Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO) Founder and CEO Dr. Kennedy Odede in his recent visit to Kenya.

    Coons, who was sent to Kenya by President Joe Biden to broker a truce between President William Ruto and Opposition leader Raila Odinga, praised Dr. Odede’s work in Kibera saying it has uplifted the lives of vulnerable women and youth.

    “I’m happy to be with you Kennedy and I’ve enjoyed seeing what you have done for your community in Kibera. God bless you and SHOFCO,” Coons said in a short video clip shared by Dr. Odede on social media.

    SHOFCO runs the largest grassroots movement in Kenya, Shofco Urban Network (SUN), with a membership of over three million, mainly in the informal settlements and semi-rural areas.

    Apart from SUN, the organisation runs six other programs which include education, healthcare, GBV response and prevention, WASH, sustainable livelihood program, and women empowerment program.

    It is for this reason that President Ruto reached out to Dr. Odede this year to advise him on slum upgrading program that his government is currently carrying out.

    The SHOFCO boss enjoys a wide network of influential individuals across the globe and was last year introduced by former United States President Bill Clinton as a family friend during Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) forum held in the New York.

    President Clinton also lauded Dr. Odede saying his initiatives have made a difference in society.

    “Pleasure to introduce someone who is to me truly embodies the best of CGI. His (Odede’s) work has improved lives in the most impoverished communities on earth. A long-time friend of our family,” the former President said before ushering him to the podium to speak.

    Dr. Odede was also appointed to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Advisory Committee by Samantha Power last year.

    Over many decades, the committee has evolved to play a key role in fostering cooperation between the US government and a range of NGOs, and it has provided a platform for civil society to engage with USAID and help inform its approach to US foreign assistance.

    The appointment came less than two years after the Dr. Odede hosted USAID boss Samantha Power at the inaugural World Communities Forum (WCF) where he shared with her, alongside other global leaders, how his focus on community-driven change has seen his organisation impact over three million slum dwellers in Kenya through various causes.

    The forum brought together high-profile development experts such as Chelsea Clinton, Darren Walker, Dr Oby Ezekwesili and Cecile Richards who listened and learnt about grassroots solutions from community-based leaders while inspiring a localisation revolution to decolonise development.

    It is at the forum that Dr. Odede challenged Power and the other leaders to invest more in community-led solutions and as a result, the USAID since committed 25 per cent of its resources to local orgainsations with a promise to do more.

    The appointment also expanded Dr. Odede’s global network to champion his favourite subject of how partnerships between the government and community-led organisations can help end poverty within Kenyan and African slums while achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    Dr. Odede shared this when he joined a panel of eminent persons at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland in May 2022 to discuss how to eliminate global poverty.

    He has been urging the national and local governments, private sector, NGOs as well as global leaders to invest in community-led solutions if the world has to achieve substantiable development.

    His tenacity and persistence over the subject were vindicated in June 2022 when SHOFCO’S community-driven change became a model for global NGOs following a case study conducted by Bridgespan Group which had a close-up look at on-the-ground approaches that make the Kenyan organisation correct.

    SHOFCO stood out among the other NGOs around the world with Bridgespan concluding that their model of community-driven change has achieved impact that lasts because the community feels a sense of ownership.

    Bridgespan Group is guiding the philanthropic choices of many leading donors, including MacKenzie Scott, ex-wife to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Ford Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation among others.

    Dr. Odede has won several awards including 2022 World Economic Forum Social Innovator of the Year, Clinton Global Initiative Outstanding Commitment Award (2010), Dell Social Innovation Competition (2010), Hartford University, Honorary Degree, Doctor of Humane letters (2016), The Future Awards Africa 2014 Prize for Advocacy (2014), People’s Choice Award Winner: Social Entrepreneur, Africa Awards for Entrepreneurship (2014), 7th East Africa Philanthropy Jury Award (20210), Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Prize (2014), and Head of State Commendation (2020) among other honours.

    Dr. Odede founded SHOFCO in 2004 in Kibera slums in Nairobi and it has now expanded to 16 counties across Kenya, serving over three million people

  • SHOFCO targets 20,000 youth with technical training program in Kisumu

    SHOFCO targets 20,000 youth with technical training program in Kisumu

    Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO) is targeting to enroll 20, 000 youth in Kisumu County in Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) institutions in the next year as part of its program to reach 500, 000 young people across Kenya in five years.

    Speaking in Kisumu County where he presided over the election of county community leaders, SHOFCO Founder and CEO Dr. Kennedy Odede said his organisation is partnering with existing TVET institutions to ensure the youth get quality training that can enable them to enter the job market.

    “We also do youth mentorship programs so that they can start their own businesses or look for jobs to earn a living using their skills. We need to invest in the youth of Kisumu County and not only here, but across 33 counties that we work in,” Dr. Odede said at Jomo Kenyatta Sports Club where he addressed over 5000 Shofco Urban Network (SUN) members who turned up to elect their county community leaders.

    The SHOFCO boss said he believes in accountability and has tapped into the expertise and lived experience of community leaders to advance his organisation’s transformative agenda.

    “We believe in working with communities and we allow them to elect their leaders who can talk about their issues with the county government, national government and the private sector,” he said.

    He added: “Community leaders help us in accountability and ensure that the right programs that can change their areas are rolled out. I grew up in Kibera slums where I saw many NGOs come up with their own ideas and not listening to the community. For me, I believe that for you to work well with the community, you must be able to listen to their needs and let them elect their own leaders whom you can work with.”

    SHOFCO is running several projects in Kisumu which include water distribution, healthcare, school libraries, gender-based violence response and prevention and women empowerment program.

    During his visit on Saturday, Dr Odede opened a new 3-storey building in Obunga slums which now houses fully equipped tailoring unit for women, a school library, a computer lab and a large community hall.

    “I also believe in financial inclusion through our SHOFCO Sacco where women and youth can take money to start their own businesses. We work with chiefs and area MCAs so that we don’t duplicate activities that government is already doing,” he stated.

    SUN currently has over 300, 000 members in Kisumu County.

    Kisumu Central Member of Parliament (MP) Joshua Oron hailed SHOFCO’s community-led change saying it mirrors what he does in his constituency.

    “I feel privileged to be part and parcel of this noble course. I’m here not because I’m an MP, but because I fully believe in what SHOFCO is doing. It is all about helping humanity. From today henceforth, I am a member of this great organisation,” Oron said.

    He added: “SHOFCO seems to mirror what I believe in; empowerment of the local communities, education as a priority, and healthcare for all.”

    Mombasa County Assembly Member for Airport Ward Ibrahim Omondi Bomoa who graced the Kisumu event praised SHOFCO for what it has done in his county.

    “When Dr. Odede brought his projects to Mombasa, we thought it was a joke, but right now, we have benefitted a lot.

    “In my ward alone, he has empowered more than 500 youth through training in TVET and he is paying for them fully and at the end of it, he recommends them for job opportunities or give them grants to start their own businesses.”

    The MCA also said SHOFCO has helped in addressing water challenges in Mombasa County.

    “In Changamwe constituency where I come from, there is a very big challenge of water but Odede brought in a solution. Right now, we have bowsers all over Changamwe distributing water,” he stated.

    The SUN elected leaders are trained on leadership, SUN objectives and how to perform their duties for the benefit of the network’s members from the grassroots to the national level.

    SUN community programs provide resources to further economic opportunity and advance human rights, creating space for individuals to pave personal paths out of poverty.

    SUN leaders also identify challenges that their communities go through and reach out to the government, the private sector and well-wishers to provide solution.

    Dr. Odede has been encouraging governments, policy leaders and donors to partner with, listen to, and scale up community-led solutions.

    In addition, he advocates for immediate shifts in resources and financing towards community-led solutions, moving towards a new development paradigm that promotes racial equity and recognizes deep-rooted community trust as the most powerful tool to deliver impact.

    Dr. Odede’s tenacity and persistence over the subject were vindicated in June 2022 when SHOFCO’s community-driven change became a model for global NGOs following a case study conducted by Bridgespan Group which had a close-up look at on-the-ground approaches that make the Kenyan organisation tick.

    His organisation, SHOFCO, stood out among the other NGOs around the world with Bridgespan concluding that their model of community-driven change has achieved an impact that lasts because the community feels a sense of ownership.