
“It is clear that we must find an African solution to our problems, and that this can only be found in African Unity. Divided we are weak; united, Africa could become one of the greatest sources for good in the world.” – Kwame Nkrumah

There is a moment many Africans experience that nobody prepares you for. You finish school, hold your degree like a sacred object and then realize it doesn’t open doors, it just looks good hanging on the wall. In many African societies, education has quietly shifted from being about learning to being about status. A degree…

There’s a familiar rhythm to public health crises in Africa. First, people start getting sick. Then communities panic quietly. Then governments reassure loudly. Then statistics appear. Then promises. Then, eventually, silence until the next crisis. Theocratically, African governments know exactly what to do in a public health emergency. There are task forces, emergency frameworks, continental…

There is something uniquely African about driving past a mega church with LED screens, security guards and a parking lot that looks like a car dealership and then passing a public hospital five minutes later that doesn’t have running water. If you grew up on the continent, this contrast doesn’t shock you anymore. It’s background…

There’s something almost strange about how climate change is talked about in Africa like it’s a distant storm we should prepare umbrellas for, instead of the flood already sitting in our living rooms. “Climate change is coming,” headlines say. As if farmers haven’t already lost harvests. As if cities haven’t already flooded. As if heatwaves…

There’s a quiet but powerful question that rarely gets asked out loud. Who gets to imagine Africa’s future? Not who funds it. Not who writes reports about it. But who actually gets to decide what progress, development and success look like on this continent. Because if you listen closely, Africa’s future is being imagined constantly…

On paper, Africa is doing amazing. Constitutions promise equality. Laws guarantee freedom. Charters protect women, youth, workers, minorities, voters, bodies, voices. If you read the documents alone, you’d think justice is not only alive but thriving, well funded, moisturized, and fully operational. Then you step outside. This is the gap African youth learn early. The…

I used to think African youth didn’t trust politics because we were tired. Or distracted. Or too online. But the truth is it’s pattern recognition. After a while, you notice that every election season feels like a badly written reboot. Same speeches, promises, smiling faces on posters printed with money we don’t have. Same outcomes.…

There’s a strange kind of freedom Africa is told it has. The freedom to make decisions, to govern itself, to chart its own economic future. And then there’s the kind of freedom that comes with an asterisk. Debt is that asterisk. On paper, debt looks neutral. Technical. Mathematical. A country borrows, invests, repays. Simple. But…

There’s a cruel joke that comes with being African and holding a passport. On paper, it’s supposed to be freedom. Proof that you belong somewhere, that you can travel, explore, learn and connect. In reality for most Africans, it’s more like a permission slip you apply for, wait for and sometimes never use. Visa inequality…