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Oprah Winfrey Is Looking for African Women Who Are Passionate About Public Service

September 13, 2019

By Lerato Mogoatlhe* [caption id="attachment_64727" align="alignnone" width="1024"]Oprah Winfrey and students from the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls. 2011. Picture credit People Magazine Oprah Winfrey and students from the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls.
2011. Picture credit People Magazine[/caption] Oprah Winfrey is once again lending her name and influence to help educate and empower more African women. The mogul — who is fondly known as Mama Oprah in South Africa — announced that the Oprah Winfrey Foundation has launched a fully-funded fellowship aimed at empowering African women who are in public service. It offers women from African countries the chance to study for free at New York University’s (NYU’s) Wagner graduate school of public service — in the hope of supporting Africa-led solutions to some of the world’s most pressing issues. The African Women’s Public Service Fellowship — a partnership between Winfrey and NYU — will provide full tuition, fees, housing, travel to and from the United States, and a stipend to cover books and other expenses. The aim of the fellowship is to “expand the opportunity for African women” who want to change public service in their countries,according to the New York University (NYU). The opportunity isn’t open, however, to applicants who are looking to fund advanced professional certificates and non-degree programmes, NYU highlights. To qualify, applicants must also be a citizen and resident in an African country; have a strong academic record; and a proven commitment to public service in their country or around the continent. The fellowship is applicable to study on these programmes at Wagner: Masters of Public Administration (MPA) in Public & Nonprofit Management & Policy; MPS in Health Policy & Management; Master of Urban Planning, and Executive Master of Public Administration (EMPA) for Public Service Leaders. Recipients of the fellowship also must commit to returning to their home countries when the programme ends, with the goal of taking on a leadership position in Africa — where they can “meaningfully contribute to the challenges currently confronting Africa,” the university says. To apply for the opportunity, applicants must send an essay, a one-minute submission video, and fill out this online application form by Dec. 2. Candidates who make the shortlist will be invited to Skype interviews with the selection committee by mid-February 2020. The fellowship joins many other education initiatives supported by the Oprah Winfrey Foundation. Speaking at the Global Citizen Festival: Mandela 100 event that was held in Johannesburg in Dec. 2018, Winfrey said society can change if we all play our part, no matter how small, in helping others. “I always thought it was because Madiba was a citizen of the world that he really got to see how the power of one leads to the empowering of many," she said. "He knew when a society is wounded, we all bleed.” She added: “As Maya Angelou taught me: Your legacy isn’t some big grand gesture that’s waiting to happen, your legacy is every life you touch... I built a school right here in South Africa to help girls become leaders of a new South Africa. Every time one of them succeeds, it is my greatest reward.” *Source Global Citizen  

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