Monday, May 11, 2015

Tabitha Karanja is definitely a Goal Digger ;)




Tabitha Karanja is CEO of Keroche Breweries and the first Kenyan to own a beer factory. Her resilience has seen her fight several battles in order to turn her company from a small factory to a multibillion-shilling business enterprise.
Tabitha was born near Kijabe in central Kenya. The first of ten siblings, she took on responsibilities at an early age of 14 years almost playing a motherly role to her siblings. So concerned was she about her siblings that she ensured they not only attended school but also performed well. This excessive concern often rubbed the wrong way with her siblings and they often fell out but they are always grateful that she pushed them to do the best. All the same, it instilled responsibility in her at an early age.
“I ensured whatever we owned thrived; from the crops on our farm to livestock,” she says. During school holidays, Tabitha’s mother, a housewife and farmer initiated her to the art of knitting shawls for her younger siblings, which everyone in the neighbourhood liked and they all wanted her to do it for them. This she did during her free time in school and in holidays.
She attended Bahati Girls in Nakuru before joining Kapkenda Girls for her A-levels. On completion, she taught for a short while as an untrained teacher prior to getting a job with the Ministry of Tourism in 1985 as a Library Administrator.
“I enjoyed working in the library because I would read many books,” she says of her keen reading habits. She felt the need to acquire more knowledge and not too long after she began doing a Certificate of Public Accountancy (CPA), which led her to thereafter study for a Bachelor degree in business administration. This honed her passion for business.
Her Venture into business:
Tabitha quit her job and started Keroche Breweries in 1997 being the first Kenyan to break into the beer brewing industry – one of East Africa’s most lucrative. In a field traditionally dominated by powerful multinational companies and men, Tabitha Mukami Muigai-Karanja did not think of herself as a woman but an entrepreneur who was out to achieve her dream against all odds. Hers is a classic entrepreneurial tale: she has battled with banks unwilling to part with desperately needed start-up capital, wealthy and exclusive competitors, uncooperative government officials and even a shut-down of her offices! Yet somehow, Tabitha, has successfully navigated all setbacks and today controls at least 20 percent of Kenya’s beer market. In her own words, she credits her personal background with preparing her for the battles she had to face in business. As the first born of 10 children, she was both sister and mother to the group; their defender and protector. And in the same way, Tabitha defended and protected Keroche Industries for a fair chance at making it in the industry. She advices other women entrepreneurs venturing into male-dominated territory to believe in oneself because you’re not likely to get much help from men if they perceive you as a threat. “I knew what I wanted in life and I worked day and night to achieve it, and here I am,” Says Tabitha.
Tabitha has extensive training in business management and in 2010 she was awarded the Moran of Burning Spear (MBS) award by the former President Mwai Kibaki for her efforts to liberalize the Kenyan liquor industry.  Truly, she is a champion blazing the trail and inspiring other female entrepreneurs across the continent. She ventured into something no one has tried and never gave up her dream, now she has started reaping profits, paving way for more to follow in her footsteps – establishing indigenous industries and ultimately, developing the economy.

Indeed, Nothing Ventured, Nothing Gained…

(Article courtesy of Superwoman Tabby Nyandiek :))

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Letters from Michelle and Faith





As you know, the second school term has just begun. Both girls need to clear a total school fees balance to date(inclusive of 2nd term fees) amounts to Ksh 26,800 or otherwise, they will be sent home. This will be extremely unfortunate, particularly for Faith who is in her final year i.e. class 8. Please support our girls. Any amount will be appreciated and the receipts will be posted on this blog.
Donations can be sent to 0717832311.
 However, if you prefer to buy a Tshirt where 10% of the proceeds will contribute to the payment of their school fees, you're welcome to do so. Each Tshirt is Ksh 1,000 and payment can be sent to MpesaTill No 130566. Go to Payment Services on your phone and select "Buy Goods".

Thank you for your continued support. I look forward to sharing their grade reports with you.


Regards,
Lila
Mdada-Founder
0717832311

Monday, May 4, 2015

Malcom X's wife, Betty X


Betty Shabazz (May 28, 1934 – June 23, 1997), born Betty Dean Sanders and also known as Betty X, was an American educator and civil rights advocate. She was the wife of Malcolm X. She grew up in Detroit, Michigan and attended the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama where she had her first encounters with racism and as a result, she moved to New York City, where she became a nurse. She witnessed her husband Malcom X’s assassination in 1965[1].
Left with the responsibility of raising six daughters as a single mother, Shabazz pursued a higher education, and went to work at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn, New York. In late 1969, Shabazz enrolled at Jersey City State College (now New Jersey City University) to complete the degree in education she left behind when she became a nurse. She completed her undergraduate studies in one year, and decided to earn a master's degree in health administration. In 1972, Shabazz enrolled at the University of Massachusetts Amherst to pursue an Ed.D. in higher education administration and curriculum development. In July 1975, she defended her dissertation and earned her doctorate[2].
In January 1976, Shabazz became associate professor of health sciences with a concentration in nursing at New York's Medgar Evers College. The student body at Medgar Evers was 90 percent black and predominantly working-class, with an average age of 26. Black women made up most of the faculty, and 75 percent of the students were female, two-thirds of them mothers.
By 1980, Shabazz was overseeing the health sciences department, and the college president decided she could be more effective in a purely administrative position than she was in the classroom. She was promoted to Director of Institutional Advancement. In her new position, she became a booster and fund-raiser for the college. A year later, she was given tenure. In 1984, Shabazz was given a new title, Director of Institutional Advancement and Public Affairs; she held that position at the college until her death[3].
It has been said the greatest power and the most untapped potential is our minds. As a girl, a woman and an African girl or woman, more is required of us to place us above the pack, ahead of the race, to beat the stereotype. You are capable! Your dreams are NOT wrong, in vain or mindless fantasies! Keep bettering yourself! Read all you have to read, as much as you need to read, as often as you need to and watch the world bow down to honour you.

This article was written by Super Woman Nicole from the Mdada team :) Thank you dear!




[1] www.wikipedia.org
[2] supra
[3] supra