I Am a Girl from Africa

I Am a Girl from Africa

by Elizabeth Nyamayaro

Narrated by Elizabeth Nyamayaro

Unabridged — 9 hours, 50 minutes

I Am a Girl from Africa

I Am a Girl from Africa

by Elizabeth Nyamayaro

Narrated by Elizabeth Nyamayaro

Unabridged — 9 hours, 50 minutes

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Overview

A “profound and soul-nourishing memoir” (Oprah Daily) from an African girl whose near-death experience sparked a lifelong dedication to humanitarian work that helps bring change across the world.

When severe drought hit her village in Zimbabwe, Elizabeth Nyamayaro, then only eight, had no idea that this moment of utter devastation would come to define her life's purpose. Unable to move from hunger and malnourishment, she encountered a United Nations aid worker who gave her a bowl of warm porridge and saved her life-a transformative moment that inspired Elizabeth to dedicate herself to giving back to her community, her continent, and the world.

In the decades that have followed, Elizabeth has been instrumental in creating change and uplifting the lives of others: by fighting global inequalities, advancing social justice for vulnerable communities, and challenging the status quo to accelerate women's rights around the world. She has served as a senior advisor at the United Nations, where she launched HeForShe, one of the world's largest global solidarity movements for gender equality. In I Am a Girl from Africa, she charts this “journey of perseverance” (Entertainment Weekly) from her small village of Goromonzi to Harare, Zimbabwe; London; New York; and beyond, always grounded by the African concept of ubuntu-“I am because we are”-taught to her by her beloved grandmother.

This “victorious” (The New York Times Book Review) memoir brings to vivid life one extraordinary woman's story of persevering through incredible odds and finding her true calling-while delivering an important message of hope, empowerment, community support, and interdependence.

Editorial Reviews

AUGUST 2021 - AudioFile

Writer Elizabeth Nyamayaro powerfully narrates her challenging but beautiful memoir. Her story begins when she is a starving child in drought-stricken Zimbabwe. Later she works with the United Nations to help with the AIDS crisis in Africa and medical concerns in Eastern Europe. Nyamayaro never shies away from the difficult truths of poverty, illness, and maternal mortality rates. She deftly balances her personal story and those of the people she has encountered in her work. Her accent is a combination of Zimbabwean and British, and she captures the accents of others respectfully. Nyamayaro’s narration is powerful, not just because of her words, but because she performs with emotions that capture the truth she has lived. V.B. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

02/15/2021

Nyamayaro’s determined debut memoir chronicles the fearlessness that took her from a desperately underprivileged childhood in Zimbabwe to founder of the HeForShe gender equality movement, an effort begun under the auspices of UN Women. The narrative moves between her career and her youth in Zimbabwe, where she was saved from dying of hunger when “an angel, dropped from heaven,” who wore a UNICEF uniform, offered her porridge and water. She then became determined to work for the UN, “where I too would be able to uplift the lives of others.” In 2000, at 25 years old, she moved to London and announced: “I am here to pursue my dream,” but discovered there was no local UN office. So started her scrappy effort to make it to Geneva. She began by braiding women’s hair for cash, worked as a sales rep doing cold calls to put herself through college, and talked her way into her first UN job as part of a project to fight AIDS in Africa. She credits her rise from there to her steadfast belief, rooted in African ubuntu philosophy, that “if one person is uplifted, then others also rise.” Nyamayaro’s steadfast pursuit of her goals is mirrored by steady narrative pacing; readers will cheer on her uncompromising commitment. Her life example provides a beacon for ambitious change-makers. Agent: Erin Malone, WME (Apr.)

From the Publisher

"This book tells the story of how its title becomes a declaration, not just for the author’s tale of remarkable challenges and achievements, but also for a continent suffering from ills ranging from misogyny and masculinism to pessimism about its ability to heal its own wounds... [Nyamayaro] is... adamantly committed to inspiration, and in that, the memoir is victorious."
The New York Times Book Review

"[A] profound and soul-nourishing memoir."
Oprah Daily

"[A] journey of perseverance."
Entertainment Weekly

"Nyamayaro explores this transformative moment in her childhood and how it drove her to become an activist and fierce advocate for change. She shares personal stories of perseverance as she reflects on what it took to make it to the U.N. herself as a Senior Advisor, where she went on to launch the HeForShe campaign."
TIME

"HeForShe founder Elizabeth Nyamayaro tells her story for the first time in I Am a Girl from Africa, which traces her childhood in Zimbabwe, her journey as a humanitarian, and her work as a United Nations Senior Advisor."
Bustle

"[A] stirring memoir."
Good Morning America

"A childhood near-death experience caused by severe drought in her village in Zimbabwe — and a lifesaving intervention by a U.N. worker — spawns Nyamayaro’s lifelong dedication to humanitarian work; she writes about her journey of perseverance and path to becoming a senior advisor at the U.N. in her memoir."
Entertainment Weekly

"In her stirring memoir I Am a Girl From Africa, the humanitarian, who grew up in a small village in rural Zimbabwe, recounts the day a U.N. aid worker rescued her from famine—and how that lifesaving encounter inspired her to become a living embodiment of the Nguni Bantu word 'ubuntu,' which means 'I am because we are.'"
Essence magazine

"Nyamayaro's journey has given her unique perspective and incredible wisdom that make this book an inspiring call to action for anyone hoping to make the world a better place."
Town and Country

"[A] deeply personal and wonderfully inspirational memoir ... a powerful tale of humanitarianism, Africa’s history, and what it means to live a life in service of others."
—Arab News

"Nyamayaro’s heartwarming and inspirational story is symbolic of the faith, community uplift, and interdependence a girl from anywhere needs to soar."
Oprah Daily

"Elizabeth Nyamayaro's I Am a Girl from Africa tells the story of the former United Nations senior advisor's inspiring full-circle journey after a UN aid worker saved her life when she was eight years old. Later in her life, she would go on to launch the HeForShe campaign and help bring change across the globe."
Marie Claire, 25 Great 2021 Memoirs to Pre-Order Now

"A moving account of a determined young woman’s journey from poverty to humanitarian activism ... Throughout this memorable account of her impressive life, the author recalls 'the central, definitive African value and philosophy of ubuntu: that when we uplift others, we are ourselves uplifted.' An inspiring narrative that will be especially valuable to young people seeking to work for humanitarian causes."
Kirkus

"The striking title of this memoir establishes the very foundation of who the author, Elizabeth Nyamayaro, is. As the content is built upon this base, readers will find that they are occupying the story of a truly exceptional human being ... A deeply personal and richly inspirational self-portrait."
Booklist

"Nyamayaro’s steadfast pursuit of her goals is mirrored by steady narrative pacing; readers will cheer on her uncompromising commitment. Her life example provides a beacon for ambitious change-makers."
Publishers Weekly

"Elizabeth Nyamayaro has written a wonderfully accessible and moving memoir that masterfully weaves her own story into the contemporary fight for global gender equity. Traveling with Nyamayaro — from Tblisi to Montevideo — is both inspiring and maddening, seeing all that has been accomplished and all that’s left to do. Somehow, through it all, she manages to maintain an unwavering optimism — and a belief in the power of NGOs, education, collaboration, and even (gasp) globalism — that buoys the soul and reminds us that there’s no progress without progressives, no light without the torch-bearers."
Dave Eggers, author of The Parade and The Captain and the Glory

"From the first page to the last, I could not put down this book. I Am a Girl from Africa is a story that can uplift and inspire every girl and boy from every part of the world. Beautifully told, and beautifully lived."
Angela Duckworth, author of Grit

“More than a heartwarming and uplifting memoir, I Am a Girl from Africa is a story of millions of girls around the world – and a true testament of what is possible when girls are given an equal right to quality education. Through Elizabeth’s remarkable story, we are reminded that education remains a closest thing to a silver bullet when it comes to gender equality.”
Dr. Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, United Nations Under-Secretary-General, UN Women

AUGUST 2021 - AudioFile

Writer Elizabeth Nyamayaro powerfully narrates her challenging but beautiful memoir. Her story begins when she is a starving child in drought-stricken Zimbabwe. Later she works with the United Nations to help with the AIDS crisis in Africa and medical concerns in Eastern Europe. Nyamayaro never shies away from the difficult truths of poverty, illness, and maternal mortality rates. She deftly balances her personal story and those of the people she has encountered in her work. Her accent is a combination of Zimbabwean and British, and she captures the accents of others respectfully. Nyamayaro’s narration is powerful, not just because of her words, but because she performs with emotions that capture the truth she has lived. V.B. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2021-02-08
A moving account of a determined young woman’s journey from poverty to humanitarian activism.

Raised by a generous, wise grandmother in Zimbabwe, Nyamayaro came of age in a time of withering heat. “There is no cool or comfortable place to hide,” she writes on the first page of her memoir. “The leaves of the tree are long gone, and with it the shade, burned away by the punishing drought that has descended on our small village.” The ensuing famine meant widespread death, but she was kept from starvation by the ministrations of U.N. aid workers. She was determined to become an aid worker herself. In 2000, at the age of 25, she moved to London, where an Irishwoman she met in a hostel dubbed her “Girl from Africa.” Nyamayaro, who returned the favor by dubbing the woman “Tiny Nose,” didn’t mind the sobriquet: “The fact that I’m African is all that matters, and that is enough. I am after all Mwana Wehvu—a child of the African soil.” Scraping to survive, finally finding work as a janitor, she talked her way into a volunteer position at a humanitarian agency and began to take on projects of increasing importance—e.g., developing responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic sweeping her native country and working to help the government of the nation of Georgia to maintain a health insurance program for impoverished communities. Leading a team to combat maternal mortality in childbirth, Nyamayaro became increasingly aware of the scarcity of resources as well as the pervasiveness of gender inequality. “Why is it that despite all the progress made by the women’s rights movement,” she asks, “no country or company or institution in the world can yet claim to have achieved gender equality?” Throughout this memorable account of her impressive life, the author recalls “the central, definitive African value and philosophy of ubuntu: that when we uplift others, we are ourselves uplifted.”

An inspiring narrative that will be especially valuable to young people seeking to work for humanitarian causes.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177349329
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 04/20/2021
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1
We desire to bequeath two things to our children:the first one is roots, the other one is wings.



—Sudanese proverb

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