Find out why, together, #WeAreGameChangers
I'm a climate game changer
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Find out why, together, #WeAreGameChangers
Together, we are exactly what this world so urgently needs. Together, #WeAreGameChangers!
We’re Martha, Ruhia, Chipo, Issabella, Christine, Stella and Sophia, part of CAMFED’s Sisterhood of game changers, proud to represent more than 250,000 leaders educated with CAMFED support. We’re here to support each other on the journey to independence and influence, and in turn send more girls to school. Together, we’re shifting mindsets, and changing the narrative for women in all walks of life!
Are you ready to support your African sisters?
Sign our Sisterhood Pledge now!Education has given us power and agency. Now, as a sisterhood of leaders in health, climate, business, education, tech, community development and policy, we’re shifting gender norms and mindsets in our communities and professions across Africa. And that means we’re changing the prospects for vulnerable girls for good! Are you with us?
Discover game changers like you in the field you are passionate about.
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Join a powerful, growing group of women who are committed to lifting up girls and women
Growing up, my parents could barely feed our family. As subsistence farmers their crops were affected by climate change. Despite our struggles, I always reminded myself that education is the one thing I need to move forward.
Today, I’m a successful climate-smart agribusiness entrepreneur specializing in mushroom production. I am feeding my community, creating jobs and training young women on climate-smart agri-practices.
I support vulnerable rural residents to build resilience in the face of the global climate change emergency – by sharing knowledge and strategies on how to address the impacts we face in rural Zimbabwe.
Meet our climate education experts and activists on CAMFED’s climate-smart demo farm in Chinsali, Zambia. Young women are teaching climate-smart agriculture, growing resilience, fighting hunger, creating jobs, keeping children in school and creating a more equitable world for all of us.
I’m Tawonga. With CAMFED support I completed my education and studied agriculture at EARTH University. Now I am plowing back my climate-smart knowledge into my community and supporting young women farmers to increase their yields and create jobs for other young people.
I almost dropped out of school because of poverty. In Form 2 of secondary school, CAMFED stepped in to support me through the rest of my education, including at Nursing College.
Now, I’m a Registered Nurse and a role model, particularly to girls. I reach out to young people with information on sexual and reproductive health, as well as pointing them to additional services. My work is helping them stay safe and healthy in school and in the community.
I’m Tendai from Zimbabwe. CAMFED supported me through school, but illness almost held me back. I persevered and now am studying to become a medical doctor. I want my achievement to benefit my fellow CAMFED Association members, and it should be seen as my community’s achievement.
Because I am a CAMFED Association member, I believe in the power of giving back to my society. The day I delivered a baby on the roadside, I was motivated to help her deliver safely because of my love for rural women and children.
CAMFED Association members trained as Learner Guides act as peer-support mentors who volunteer in schools. They provide vital sexual and reproductive health information, work to prevent HIV/AIDS and keep girls safe from exploitation.
Grade 7 — the final year of primary school — could have been my highest educational attainment had it not been for CAMFED. It stepped in to support me both in the classroom and beyond, through our powerful Sisterhood of educated women leaders.
I am a proud holder of a Diploma in Education. I am a teacher in my community, working with children living with disabilities. Through CAMFED training, I also became my school’s Teacher Mentor, providing additional psychosocial support and counseling to the most vulnerable students.
I’m Martha from Mpika district in Zambia. I was recently recruited, along with 116 of my fellow sisters in the CAMFED Association by the Teaching Service Commission to start my first teaching post.
I am ever grateful to CAMFED, which came to my rescue and paid my fees to help me complete school. I see a lot of “Lucias” – girls just like me, who are really in need. I hope I inspire them the way my sisters in the CAMFED Association inspire me every day.
I was the first CAMFED Association member in Tanzania to qualify as a Teacher and also trained as a Teacher Mentor. I provide additional guidance and counselling to vulnerable students in my school.
I almost dropped out of school because of the challenges I faced, and had no hope of progressing to university to pursue my dream. From childhood I have wanted to be a fashion designer because of my love for color.
Through CAMFED support, I now hold a Bachelor of Technology in Fashion Design and Technology. I’m a successful businesswoman bringing jobs to my community and mentoring over 300 young women — passing on my skills in sewing and in entrepreneurship — so they can also start out in business.
CAMFED Association members trained as Business Guides help their peers to start and grow successful businesses, so they can create jobs for themselves and others, build a brighter future, and enable the next generation of children to thrive in school.
I am an entrepreneur, farming potatoes on four acres of land, running a piggery, and an agroforestry business. Through my businesses, I am able to provide employment opportunities for my community.
I am not an ordinary young woman. I am a business woman. I am walking through the streets of success with optimism of a greater future ahead.
Life growing up was really tough. I lost my parents when I was young and my cousin, who stepped up as my guardian, struggled to support me. I was at the edge of dropping out of school, but with the support that I got from CAMFED I was able to complete my education.
As a member of its Sisterhood of graduates, I have acquired skills that I use to improve the lives of people in my community, especially vulnerable children. I am proud of what I’ve been able to achieve, including through my work as a ‘Big Sister’ trained through CAMFED’s Guide programs.
In my experience as a Learner Guide I have developed the ability to stand and talk in front of people. I got business training. The money I save, I use for family issues because my family is poor. My goal in business is that I wish to be a great businesswoman.
CAMFED Association members trained as Transition Guides provide mentoring and skills support to their younger peers as they get ready to leave school, supporting them to develop their economic independence and leadership.
I am proud of the progress made by my learners, seeing them become more confident and resilient through my mentoring and guidance. With the skills I have learned in my role, I feel better equipped to tackle community issues.
When I was at school, I came close to dropping out because of my lack of fees, exercise books, and other scholastic materials. CAMFED supported me with these school-going needs so I could continue.
Now, I’ve finished my tertiary education and I am an ICT technician. With my income, I’m able to support my family and community members, including disadvantaged students and elderly people. My tech expertise enables me to help other CAMFED graduates to use media platforms, so we can connect and share knowledge with our sisters in other districts and countries.
I assist young women from rural areas by providing them with current information updates and help them adapt to the new normal where everything is digitalized, such as online applications to Universities and colleges, virtual interviews and digital marketing for those in business.
Studying ICT has really helped me to understand the modern world I am living in. I am still surprised and amazed at how computers work and I want to understand how we can use them to benefit all society.
Coming into this training, being exposed to this kind of technology — it uplifted my spirit; I thought ‘there is another opportunity, there is life again; I can make it, I can dream again.’ Having that transition of status in society, I felt I was a different person.
Katheryne Hernandez $158
james traver $130
Ella Hubert $25
Diane Green $106
GORD MAXWELL $21.4
Chris Tawwater $106
Sue Bremner $100
Stephanie Gonzales £5.4
Stephanie Gonzales £7.5
Jynx Houston $105
Camilla Myers $31.9
Fiona Anderson £124.9