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#6
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03-17-2011, 07:52 PM
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Re: Kid Builds Windmill For Village
Well shit. The first one i've seen that isn't laying about breeding just waiting for a handout. Ok, all of africa can die except for him. I have alot of respect for anyone that has the dash to make a go of it and not give in to the temptation of crime, and so young. This is the kind of person that should be given help, imagine what he can do with the right resources.
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#8
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03-18-2011, 06:24 AM
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Re: Kid Builds Windmill For Village
I bet his expulsion gave to him the strenght to study even more and to prove to himself (and to those that expelled him) that you don't need a school if you own a working brain. BTW, the dude is now senior at the African Leadership Academy in Johannesburg. Really an awesome story, thanks for sharing http://williamkamkwamba.typepad.com/...thor-and-.html http://williamkamkwamba.typepad.com/ |
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#10
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03-18-2011, 07:50 AM
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Re: Kid Builds Windmill For Village
Sadly, it's happening to many cultures: I agree, technology does not always improve the quality of people's lives, especially if the price to pay is a complete loss of identity (which often, consequentially, means loss of pride and dignity for entire tribes). Often, the process of improving technologically some tribe's lives, turns out to be a damage to them, and often is as useless as trying to humanize wild animals as pets (if not even dangerous). For example, I'm not a member of some tribe, but my island is litterally being defaced by wind turbines: yes, they do produce clean power, but since our economy is mostly based on tourism, and since tourism is mostly based on the beauty of our natural resources and to the ancient habits of my people, to conserve the natural beauty of the island would have helped our economy much more than those damned turbines. As well as the spread of the most spoken languages is killing many other ones: The list of the Recently extinct languages and the one of the endangered ones are impressive: it's all culture lost forever, and yes, that's very sad. I thought (and still think) that the personal story of this guy is awesome, but there's always another side of the coin |