Kennedy Odede
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Kennedy is an internationally recognized human rights activist. Kennedy was born and raised in the Kibera Slum, the largest slum in Africa. As the oldest of eight children, he assumed responsibility for his family at the age of ten. In Kibera, he became a certified HIV/AIDS counselor, was a community health worker, and ran several slum-wide AIDS education campaigns.

In 2004, he founded SHOFCO, one of the largest community based organizations in Kibera founded and run by residents of the slum. Kennedy is now the co-founder and Executive Director of Shining Hope for Communities, a nonprofit that works in Kibera to combat gender inequality and extreme poverty. Kennedy has received widespread recognition for his work. He is a 2010 Echoing Green Fellow, won the 2010 Dell Social Innovation Competition, and recently wrote an Op-Ed that appeared in The New York Times. He is a senior fellow with Humanity in Action and a junior at Wesleyan University. Kennedy is 25 years old, speaks five languages, and brings his extensive experience in grass-roots organizing, as well as passion for social justice and poverty alleviation, to his work with Shining Hope for Communities. To learn more, visit shininghopeforcommunities.org.

Blog Entries by Kennedy Odede

My World Aids Day

Posted December 2, 2010 | 14:15:00 (EST)

Today, I had to reflect and meditate about World Aids Day. I began to think that part of the problem with the AIDS epidemic is that we do not think of it as "My World Aids Day." We do not think about how it has touched our lives, or how...

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Bringing Hope to Africa's Largest Slum

Posted October 22, 2010 | 18:24:20 (EST)

It's 5 a.m. in Nairobi Kenya's Kibera slum -- the largest slum in Africa, where I was born and lived for 23 years.

My little brother, the youngest of the seven children in my family, is crying. He is hungry. He has not eaten since lunchtime yesterday, and even then,...

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