We are thrilled that CAMFED has been awarded the 2021 Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize, the world’s largest annual humanitarian award presented to a nonprofit in recognition of extraordinary contributions toward alleviating human suffering.
This Prize belongs to each individual in our movement — most of all the 178,000 members of the CAMFED Association— the pan-African network of women leaders educated with CAMFED support— and to our community-based champions including parents, teachers and local leaders. As COVID-19 and climate change continue to threaten the progress made by women and girls globally, our grassroots activists are stopping at nothing to make sure girls stay safe and keep learning.
The CAMFED Association, founded in 1998, includes young women who serve as mentors and trainers, work as teachers, health care workers, and climate-smart entrepreneurs, and each support with their own resources another three girls – on average – to go to school each year.
CAMFED’s model of investing in girls’ education from childhood through their formative years, with a focus on celebrating the agency of the next generation of female leaders, is a proven success even in the face of adversity, and has been recognized by notable leaders and thinkers across the globe.
CAMFED was founded in 1993 in response to the scale of girls’ exclusion from education, and in recognition of the transformative benefits that accrue when the right to education is secured for all girls. What began in Zimbabwe as a program supporting 32 girls in two schools has now become a movement that has already supported more than 4.8 million disadvantaged students in 6,787 schools across 163 districts in Ghana, Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
CAMFED’s model, which has been thoroughly tested and refined, provides financial and social support for girls to attend and thrive in primary and secondary school. Post-school, CAMFED provides business training, finance, and support for young women to access higher education and employment opportunities, so that they can safely transition to a secure and fulfilling adulthood. Those joining the CAMFED Association commit to mentoring and supporting each other, as well as the next generation, as they grow into respected role models in their communities, working to secure every child’s right to go to school, and change the status quo for girls for good.
CAMFED’s Executive Director, Angeline Murimirwa, was one of the first young women to receive support from CAMFED to go to secondary school and is a founding member of the CAMFED Association. She now oversees the delivery of CAMFED’s mission, working closely with all CAMFED offices. Angeline understands from experience both the desire for education and the enormous hurdles girls face in securing their right to education.
Angeline confirmed that the $2.5 million Prize funds will be used to help grow the CAMFED Association to 280,000 action-oriented women leaders, who have the expertise, the passion, the commitment, the connections, and the democratic infrastructure for cascading knowledge and acting with agility in times of crisis. Their activism is at the core of CAMFED’s wider strategic goals: To support another 5 million girls through school; to help 50,000 young women to create climate-smart agricultural businesses; and to create 150,000 new jobs over the next five years.
In place of what has previously been an in-person Prize ceremony and symposium, this year, the Hilton Foundation will once again host a virtual Prize ceremony and an online conversation series in partnership with Devex under the theme “The Future of Humanitarian Action: The Power of Communities.” The Prize Ceremony will take place virtually on Wednesday, October 13, followed by the conversation series later in the fall.
Celebrate with us at the 2021 Hilton Humanitarian Prize Ceremony
On October 13th, 2021, three of our leaders - Angeline Murimirwa, Fiona Mavingha and Lydia Wilbard - accepted the 2021 Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize on behalf of all in our global movement.
Watch Devex conversation #1: The power of girls’ education and women’s leadership
CAMFED joins global thought leaders in three online conversations in a series hosted by the Hilton Foundation and Devex under the theme “The Future of Humanitarian Action: The Power of Communities.”
Looking at girls’ education through a different lens
CAMFED Co-Executives Angeline Murimirwa and Lucy Lake are urging the global education community to take an approach that is both inclusive and disruptive in order to change the status quo and deliver social justice.