Edmonton Journal

CHALLENGIN­G CONVENTION­S

Former PM Campbell talks leadership with female students in rural Kenya

- CRAIG KIELBURGER Craig Kielburger is co-founder of the WE Movement, which includes WE Charity, ME to WE Social Enterprise and WE Day.

Wilter Chesang was 14 when she ran away from her home in the village of Kabaruso in rural Kenya.

She had just finished her

Grade 8 exams with exceptiona­l marks. While she was looking forward to high school, her father had other plans. He wanted her to be circumcise­d and married.

Rather than face forced matrimony, she told her family she was headed to the river to collect water and took off. She lived alone in the forest for two months, eating fruit and sleeping on the ground. A chance encounter with a kind woman who gave her bus fare and told her about Kisaruni, WE’S all-girls’ secondary school, led her to the headmistre­ss’s office. She pleaded for a scholarshi­p and the headmistre­ss admitted her.

Years later, Chesang found herself sitting with a class of nursing students as Kim Campbell, Canada’s 19th prime minister, talked about leadership. Campbell joined me in Narok County for the ribbon cutting at WE College. Touring the campus, she paused to address some students, including Chesang.

Surrounded by two dozen students — all young women who’ve likewise overcome incredible odds to pursue their education — Chesang asked what lessons in leadership the former prime minister drew from her experience breaking the mould.

“Nobody who had been prime minister of Canada looked or sounded like me. When you’re the first person to do a job, there will be pushback,” said Campbell, the first and only woman to hold the nation’s highest government office.

In this very rural corner of the country, many of the young women in the audience were the first in their families to finish primary school, attend secondary school, and continue to college. They will be among the first women from their villages to hold profession­al positions.

“Every time someone new does a job, they change expectatio­ns,” Campbell said.

For Chesang, these words about challengin­g convention were deeply personal. She thrived in secondary school, finishing at the top of her class, and went on to become president of her student body at university. It took years, but slowly her father began to accept her choice and the two reconciled. It may be uncharted territory in her village, but Chesang is changing expectatio­ns for women who will follow her example.

Great leadership is the same around the world — breaking boundaries while paving the way for others. “You are establishi­ng the new normal,” Campbell told the students, thanking them for their courage in stepping up as leaders.

The next class of young women to enter WE College with dreams of becoming engineers, doctors and entreprene­urs will aim higher than those who came before them, standing on the shoulders of trailblaze­rs like Chesang.

Women the world over have had to establish a new normal in order to become leaders. They’ve had to be courageous to be first. In Kenya, that may mean becoming the first woman in the village to attend college. In Canada, it may mean the first woman in a certain political office or C-suite. That courage is necessary if we’re to arrive at a day when women leaders are no longer firsts but the norm.

 ?? CNW GROUP/WE CHARITY ?? Kenya’s first lady Margaret Kenyatta, second from right, cuts a ribbon at the country’s new WE College alongside the charity’s co-founder Craig Kielburger.
CNW GROUP/WE CHARITY Kenya’s first lady Margaret Kenyatta, second from right, cuts a ribbon at the country’s new WE College alongside the charity’s co-founder Craig Kielburger.
 ??  ?? Kim Campbell
Kim Campbell
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