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Building the Future: A New Chapter in Our 25-Year Vision

The first two months of the year have been about more than just planning; they’ve been about building the very foundation for our work over the next quarter of a century. You may have noticed a shift in our activity, and we’re excited to finally share the infrastructure we’ve been developing to bring our long-term vision to life. At the heart of this is a belief that a 25-year vision isn't something you achieve alone. It’s a legacy you build with an entire generation. To do that, we need to empower people with the tools, knowledge, and opportunities to contribute. Here’s a look at the key platforms we’ve launched to make that happen. Launching Our Digital Ecosystem We are thrilled to introduce the first of our new digital platforms, designed to connect, educate, and empower. - The Opportunities Hub: We’ve gone live with our opportunities platform at eHub.forezava.org. This is a central space to share opportunities from both within our organization and from our wider network. Our go...

The 15 Billion Tree Question: Are We Planting Forests or Wasting Futures?

For the better part of this week, I have been crunching numbers. Not for a spreadsheet or a government report, but because I believe that when we communicate numbers honestly and clearly, we can finally share a truthful vision for a better country. One figure has been running through my mind constantly: 15 billion. That is the number of trees the Kenyan government aims to plant in the next few years. It is an ambitious target, a headline-grabbing commitment to fighting climate change and restoring our landscape. On paper, it sounds like a green revolution in the making. But after running the math from my own small corner of this country—a tree nursery struggling to survive—I have to ask a difficult question: Is this campaign truly planting forests, or is it wasting futures? The Economic Promise Hiding in Plain Sight Let us begin with the vision of what could be. If we approach this target with honesty, the economic potential is staggering. Consider the value of a single tree seedling. ...

From 150 Rejections to Building a Community: My Journey to Finding Real Opportunities

When I look back at where this journey started, I don’t see a success story. I see a young, brilliant social entrepreneur who was full of passion but had no map. Like many of you, I had the ideas and the drive. I wanted to change my community. But I quickly hit a wall that felt insurmountable: I couldn’t access the funding or the learning opportunities I desperately needed to grow. For years, I worked in the dark, letting my lived experiences guide me. What started as a small spark back in 2015 has, through sheer stubbornness and a lot of hard lessons, slowly become the cornerstone of my work and ambition today. But the road here wasn't smooth. It was paved with rejection slips. I will never forget 2019. That year became a brutal classroom for me. I was so hungry for a breakthrough that I wrote over 150 proposals. One hundred and fifty. I spent countless nights researching, typing, and praying over these applications. And one by one, they came back as rejections. It wasn't unti...

WALIGUUUULA, What 5,000,000 for House Warming Party Says of our County's Priorities!

Power, Comfort, and the Quiet Exclusion of Vihiga’s Youth There are moments when public outrage is not born of shock, but of recognition. When a story emerges and citizens respond not with disbelief but with a tired nod— of course —it signals something deeper than a single incident. It signals a pattern. The recent reports concerning the use of KSh 5,000,000 of county funds on a house-warming event at the Speaker’s official residence in 2023 have provoked such a response in Vihiga County. The matter, already entangled with other unresolved audit questions surrounding the same residence, was later addressed before the Senate Committee on Accounts . Yet the explanations offered by the county administration felt incomplete, carefully worded, and ultimately unsatisfying. They answered around the issue, not into it. This was not an isolated concern. In the same breath, questions were raised about KSh 6,000,000 used in a manner inconsistent with the law to facilitate car mortgage arrangemen...

Community Vigilance and Shared Responsibility: A Call for Safety in Vihiga County

We have recently witnessed a worrying pattern of criminal incidents that deserve the collective attention of all residents and security stakeholders. Within a short span of time, a boda boda rider was murdered in Lunyerere and his motorcycle stolen, followed by a similar incident two days later in Chavakali. Yesterday, two bodies were retrieved from a septic tank in Mbale, and an attack was reported at the Vihiga County Assembly, with claims that the assailants escaped with a stolen weapon. Photo Credits:  These incidents, taken together, raise serious concerns about the safety and security of our communities. While investigations are ongoing and facts must be allowed to guide conclusions, it is clear that heightened vigilance and cooperation are urgently needed. As residents of Vihiga County, security cannot be viewed as the responsibility of law enforcement alone. Community members are often the first to notice unusual movements, unexplained behavior, or emerging threats. Reporti...

KCSE 2025: The Grades Are Out — Congratulations but...

Just like years past, we have collectively held our breath. Names are checked. Mean grades are compared. WhatsApp groups explode. Headlines scream about who “made it” and who didn’t. And once again, the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) results for the Class of 2025 have given us plenty to talk about. At first glance, the numbers look impressive. Nearly 270,000 students scored C+ and above, qualifying for direct university entry. That’s an increase from last year — a genuine achievement. Even more encouraging, girls slightly outnumbered boys, continuing a quiet but powerful trend toward gender balance in national exams. For a system long criticised for leaving girls behind, this matters. So yes — credit where it’s due. 👏 But after the celebrations settled, I found myself less interested in the top scorers and more curious about everyone else. Here’s the figure that rarely trends on social media: More than 350,000 students scored D+, D or D-. That’s over a third of all ca...

Ask Not What the Nation Shall Do for You — A 2026 Commitment to Action

As 2026 unfolds, I find myself returning to this timeless call—not as a slogan, but as a personal challenge. This year is a moment to redefine our collective responsibility in the face of climate change, environmental degradation, and the urgent need to unlock opportunities for young people. The global context makes this clearer than ever. With growing unilateralism, major geopolitical shifts, and decisions such as the withdrawal of the United States from dozens of UN agencies, resources for climate and development work are tightening. Programs are shrinking. Priorities are shifting. But crises have always revealed something important: waiting is no longer an option. This is the moment for proactive citizenship—where individuals and community-led institutions step forward, not to replace governments or global systems, but to complement them with action rooted in place, purpose, and accountability. Turning Commitment into Practice For me, 2026 marks a clear turning point in how I seek t...