African Women in Leadership are a Catalyst for Change

The Alliance for Women and Girls (AFWAG) Premiered a Powerful New Documentary Framing Gender Equity as Central to Solving Africa’s Climate, Education, and Inequality Crises.

The Nairobi premiere brought together policymakers, philanthropists, corporate allies, and grassroots leaders, all united by the belief that investing in African women is not an act of charity but a catalyst for global transformation.

The documentary named ‘Daughter of the Soil: Sowing Seeds of Hope’ is a powerful work of art that reframes African women’s leadership as a strategic driver of global progress on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

According to Dr. Vongai Nyahunzvi, Founder and CEO of AFWAG, educating a girl is educating a nation. Echoing this African proverb, she points out how motivating it is in aiding transformative and impactful change aimed at empowering girls and women, not only in Kenya or Zimbabwe but across the region.

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from (L- R)Dr. Vongai Nyahunzvi, Founder and CEO of AFWAG in a panel discussion with Yukabeth Kidenda CEO and Co -Founder of teach for Kenya

The film echoes the message from Dr. Vongai Nyahunzvi, Founder & CEO, AFWAG that when we support women’s leadership, we don’t just address one issue but rather we unlock solutions to climate, education, and poverty all at once.

Daughter of the soil documentary comes at a pivotal moment for East Africa and the broader region where significant progress has been made in attaining women inclusion despite the major gaps remaining.

Notably, across the region, fewer than half of adolescent girls in countries like Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania complete secondary school. In Kenya alone, up to four in ten girls aged 15–19 have experienced pregnancy, while one in three women across East Africa face intimate partner violence, with femicide cases steadily increasing.

In South Sudan, over half of all girls are married before the age of 18, which reinforces the urgency of investing in African women’s leadership as a pathway to transformative, long-term change.

These sobering statistics reinforce the urgency of investing in African women’s leadership as a pathway to transformative, long-term change.

The documentary, directed by award-winning Zimbabwean filmmaker Kudzai Tinago of Tigzozo Media, follows the compelling personal and professional journey of Dr. Vongai Nyahunzvi, Founder and CEO of AFWAG.

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Award-winning-Zimbabwean-filmmaker-Kudzai-Tinago-during-the-premier-of-the-documentary-scaled

A journey that is illustrated in the film shows Dr. Vongai’s childhood in Norton, Zimbabwe, to her continent-wide mission to dismantle barriers for women and girls, the documentary highlights the transformative impact of feminist leadership on communities, economies, and systems.

This story is not just about me. It’s about millions of African women who are architects of progress. But lasting change cannot be achieved by individuals alone. We need collective action. That’s why we’re calling on donors, governments, and corporates to fund and amplify women-led solutions as a pathway to scalable, systemic change”, she added.

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