
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Amy Ahiga is a wife, mother, former art teacher, and the co-founder of Grain of Rice Project, an organization that seeks to empower Kenyans through educational and training initiatives in Jesus' name. Amy is passionate about ensuring children from marginalized and underprivileged parts of society in Kenya have access to quality education. She is currently in the process of starting a school in Nanyuki, Kenya. Amy divides her time between Kenya and Valparaiso, Indiana, where she resides with her husband and 1-year old son.
The Kibera slum is the largest urban slum in Africa. Recent estimates show that over 235,000 people live in the single square-mile area that makes up Kibera. Other sources suggest the total Kibera population may be as high as a half a million to well over a million people depending on which slums are included in defining Kibera. Life in Kibera is beyond challenging. Men, women, and children live in simple shacks made of sticks, mud, and tin. There’s no running water, sewage runs rampant, and most people survive on less than $1 a day. Children born in the slum of Kibera are at such a high risk of continuing the cycle of extreme poverty. Access to something as simple and basic as education can mean the difference between life and death. My guest today is doing her part to tip the scale and make a difference in the lives of kids in Kibera. Amy Ahiga is the cofounder of Grain of Rice Project, an organization that seeks to empower Kenyans through educational and training initiatives in Jesus’ name. Amy is passionate about insuring that children from marginalized and underprivileged parts of society in Kenya have access to quality education. She’s also in the process of starting a school in Nanyuki, Kenya. I actually met Amy at the Fair Trade Federation Conference last Spring and knew right away I wanted to have her on the show. I’m so excited to share this conversation with you and can’t wait for you to hear more about Amy and Grain of Rice’s work in Kibera!
3:00 - The Amy 101
7:39 – Why Kenya?
11:12 - A Local Team
17:35 - The Largest Slum in East Africa
25:35 – A Blended Family
33:43 – Building a School
37:37 – Getting to Know Our Guest
Memorable Quotes:
~9:00 - “Once you’re there and you see the really amazing, positive things about the culture, you also see the need and the joy despite the need, I think it’s really hard to turn a blind eye to some of the things you’ve seen after you’ve been there.”
~10:45 - “I think it’s in those uncomfortable moments that we really do grow and we kind of learn who we were made to be.”
5
161161 ratings
Amy Ahiga is a wife, mother, former art teacher, and the co-founder of Grain of Rice Project, an organization that seeks to empower Kenyans through educational and training initiatives in Jesus' name. Amy is passionate about ensuring children from marginalized and underprivileged parts of society in Kenya have access to quality education. She is currently in the process of starting a school in Nanyuki, Kenya. Amy divides her time between Kenya and Valparaiso, Indiana, where she resides with her husband and 1-year old son.
The Kibera slum is the largest urban slum in Africa. Recent estimates show that over 235,000 people live in the single square-mile area that makes up Kibera. Other sources suggest the total Kibera population may be as high as a half a million to well over a million people depending on which slums are included in defining Kibera. Life in Kibera is beyond challenging. Men, women, and children live in simple shacks made of sticks, mud, and tin. There’s no running water, sewage runs rampant, and most people survive on less than $1 a day. Children born in the slum of Kibera are at such a high risk of continuing the cycle of extreme poverty. Access to something as simple and basic as education can mean the difference between life and death. My guest today is doing her part to tip the scale and make a difference in the lives of kids in Kibera. Amy Ahiga is the cofounder of Grain of Rice Project, an organization that seeks to empower Kenyans through educational and training initiatives in Jesus’ name. Amy is passionate about insuring that children from marginalized and underprivileged parts of society in Kenya have access to quality education. She’s also in the process of starting a school in Nanyuki, Kenya. I actually met Amy at the Fair Trade Federation Conference last Spring and knew right away I wanted to have her on the show. I’m so excited to share this conversation with you and can’t wait for you to hear more about Amy and Grain of Rice’s work in Kibera!
3:00 - The Amy 101
7:39 – Why Kenya?
11:12 - A Local Team
17:35 - The Largest Slum in East Africa
25:35 – A Blended Family
33:43 – Building a School
37:37 – Getting to Know Our Guest
Memorable Quotes:
~9:00 - “Once you’re there and you see the really amazing, positive things about the culture, you also see the need and the joy despite the need, I think it’s really hard to turn a blind eye to some of the things you’ve seen after you’ve been there.”
~10:45 - “I think it’s in those uncomfortable moments that we really do grow and we kind of learn who we were made to be.”
2,423 Listeners
2,309 Listeners
10,393 Listeners
2,884 Listeners
1,784 Listeners
827 Listeners
836 Listeners
6,516 Listeners
953 Listeners
1,256 Listeners
426 Listeners
367 Listeners
75 Listeners
186 Listeners
128 Listeners