Tag: inspiring

  • Inspiring others as a young entrepreneur

    Nigeria has become home to many young talent, some of whom have gained international recognition.

    With his name being counted after establishing a thriving startup, a young graduate of Kogi State University and the creative Director, Toubie’s Creations, Aiyenigba Oloruntobi, is an entrepreneur to watch.

    All over, youths are finding a way to survive the economic situation. Increasing retrenchments in workplaces and the increase of jobless young people, fuel the rise of local innovators as people strive to fight against the tide of economic challenges . Many  employed youth have shifted focus to the informal sector, often learning completely new skills in order to survive under harsh economic conditions. Young graduates are establishing successful ventures to create unique and innovative products. One area they are recording successes is in the creative industry.

    The industry is helping to mitigate the country’s unemployment challenge and helping the youths to unleash their entrepreneurial capabilities, thus helping to create jobs for the local economy and lifting many out of poverty. Making shoes has become the way of life for the youth where the economy continues to recover from shrinking amid perpetual closures of industries.

    A creative and versatile footwear innovator and trainer with a fantastic eye for detail, product design and development, Aiyenigba Oloruntobi is among the very few young e entrepreneurs that are pursuing shoemaking while empowering young people and women to acquire the right skills to become financially stable.

    For Oloruntobi, running shoe business has become a way to escape unemployment.

    How did he come about with the business idea? This was his answer: “It was shortly after I graduated that I realised that people had the need for good shoes and so I decided to go into it since I already have an idea. “The shoe industry is peculiar. This is because every sane person needs a good shoe and so, the demand for it can never come to an end. This is the reason I went into it.”

    He started small in December 2016. “I started with repairing of old shoes. I didn’t start with any capital. So, speaking of how much I started with, I think it was with less than N1, 000.”

    He is faring well. So far, the signals justify the upbeat mood. Local buyers are flocking in droves to patronise indigenous producers and many of them are new customers.

    For the first time too, domestic manufacturers are in the enviable position of being able to turn down business.

    The enterprising young business man has plunged into serious leather shoe production. The business is growing .It has five staff and a number of apprentices.

    A combination of personal savings, goodwill from material suppliers built up during his business has helped the business to grow. Besides, he is fortunate to start the company with good clients.

    However, for one to succeed, an aspiring shoe maker needs basic knowledge of creative engineering, shoemaking skills and fashion knowledge.

    The thing about shoemaking is that one really has to know something about every process involved in the manufacturing of shoes, along with a good sense of what is happening with the market. This he has achieved.

    His failures and what he has learned from them? His words: We’ve made some designs that didn’t really do well in the market. It wasn’t welcomed by people. What I learnt from there is that, not everything you do will be accepted by the masses. But that shouldn’t stop you from trying out new things.”

    All this made him take a hard re-look at his business. For him, if he has to grow the business beyond Lagos or even beyond what he is doing now, he had to do things differently. The business has many challenges. Prominent among others include influx of cheap imports from China and strong brands. Right now, competition is fierce and comes from both local and international sources. Some of the big brands have the ability to mass produce shoes at very competitive prices due to their labour costs that are significantly lower than theirs.

    A lot of them have managed to maintain a competitive edge by creating niche brands offering unique products.

  • Inspiring  a silent  audience

    Inspiring a silent audience

    The speaker could not see his audience; but the audience too could not audibly hear his speech. This was the scenario at the International Conference on Disability (ICD) held last week at ‘Interest Room 3’ of the Civic Centre, Lagos as Joke Kujenya was there.

    One after the other, participants trooped into the Interest Room 3 at the Civic Centre, venue of the International Conference on Disability (ICD), in Lagos. The session was to examine ‘The Role of Extracurricular Activities, e.g. Sports in Social Welfare and Development,’ by  Professor Kolapo P. M. Ajuwon, President/CEO, Special Education/Rehabilitation Studies, Calgary, Missouri, USA and CEO, Horizon System Concepts Management Ltd .

    As the session commenced, serenity engulfed the room. Even the gesticulation of the sign language interpreter could not make up for the dead silence.

    However, as the professor went on with his speech, based on his interest and experiences in life, he interjected with questions in between to know if the participants were getting his drift. All he however got was silence, even though his ‘listeners’ nodded their acquiescence.

    Professor Ajuwon began by explaining his interest in recreation activities, especially to visually impaired people, but noted that the lessons he would share would also be applicable to every human being.

    He narrated the story of his days at the Paccelli School for the Blind, during which they had to learn to swim because they were told that it has tangible and intangible benefits. He said the school also had other sports including ‘tug of war’ and ‘Scaging’, ‘Rope skipping’ and others. He noted that they had very creative teachers who all taught them the benefits and the creativity.

    He told them about his time at St Finbar’s College, which he said was the first school to accept blind students. “That was when a form of inclusive education began, as only two of us were blind out of over 700 students. So, apart from Physical Education (PE) activities, they would pair us with other students; we were often left out of other sporting activities. And so, we were left passive as the two of us would only sit aside without participating in any other school events.”

    Thereafter, he told of how he went to CMS Grammar School for his Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC) and, how there too, he still was left passive.

    “All the while, in all these places, I tried to tell whoever cared to listen that I could do all the sports. But my comments all went unheeded,” he intoned.

    “It was when I went to the United States of America (USA) for my university education that I was fully integrated into sporting activities. I was made to hike. And oh, it gave me tremendous therapeutic values, which helped me in life. In the mornings, I would take a walk alone out of my dormitory early in the morning to listen to birds singing. I would listen to squirrels squirming and all sorts. And on the inside, I would feel so lively and strong and I will be so attentive in my classes because the activities I have had in the morning was like ‘medicine’ to my entire body.

    “When some professors noticed my liveliness, they started asking if I had been having such sporting activities back home. I told them the truth that people with disabilities are often relegated to the back row, made to sit down, just to read a book and lay idle, no sports at all. And I also confessed that I wished things would improve.”

    Subsequently, he said the Professors began exposing him to so many sporting events, in contrast to back home in Nigeria, where visually impaired people are made to sit through many activities.

    Hitting his walking stick on the ground for emphasis, he asked: “How many times can we re-emphasise it that disability shouldn’t be an automatic death sentence and a life of waste?”

    He recalled that Nigeria signed a Convention in 2006 on the Rights of Persons with Disability (PWD) to enable them participate fully without hindrance in sports, recreation and leisure, and not just to be left in a secluded on their own. “But because of our poor orientation in this country, our society lacks what it takes to practise inclusive leisure for PWDs.”

    He encouraged his mostly hearing-impaired listeners, not to allow their inner quests be dampened. He told the story of how during his days as a lecturer at the old University of Ife (UNIFE), now Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), he said “a man who was a PWD went to swim and he got drowned and died. Then, the Head of Faculty went about asking for donations to support the deceased’s family. But people began to say all kinds of debilitating criticisms against the man and demonizing him. Then, I waded in and began to educate them to change their orientation towards PWDs and that was how, to some extent, they began to help them have recreational activities in the school.”

    He demanded that Persons with Disabilities (PWDs) must be included in any sporting event they can cope with; otherwise they would begin to drive their energy in the wrong directions, such as beer drinking and other vices.

    He said extracurricular activities for PWDs should be geared towards orientating them to be more productive in leisure and profitable ventures, while expressing regrets that, even in global sports, PWDs are not well-treated when they sustain injuries and said that all these need to change.

    “Our schools, private, public and special or regular must be well-structured and well-funded to serve as models for what children with disabilities need. PWDs should be included in vocations during vacations and parents should take them along to places of interests. The painful aspect is that most parents don’t have the money to take care of the disabilities in their children. Government alone cannot be expected or asked to cater for and provide solutions for these set of people.

    “Parents, families, public and private schools have roles to play in having special care to meet the needs of PWDs. Corporate organisations should use their Corporate Social Responsibilities (CSR) to provide treadmill for these set of people.

    “For instance, I have a ‘Stationary Bike’ in my home. This bike is fixed in one place and you can ride it and calibrate the speed as you want. You can either power it by electricity or battery, whichever, it makes you feel good like regular bike lovers. As a lover of biking, I also use ‘Tandem Bike’. Now, this one is for two people and it can go on to the major roads. A regular person that can bike sits at the front, and the PWD sits at the back. But both riders have the pedal. The fun is really that while the one at the front does the real peddling and controlling the bike, the one at the back is doing what is called ‘mock peddling’. In the process, he is only exercising his joints and having fun. These things are there but I can understand that Nigeria does not have the roads for such yet. But it still creates fun and you don’t miss out because you cannot see or hear.”

    In rounding off, he asked government at all level and schools to begin to have a rethink at improving the lives of students with disabilities, to encourage them.

    He lamented that during his self-funded tour of tertiary colleges in Nigeria, he found that a great institution like the University of Jos (UNIJOS) has nothing in consideration for PWDs.

    He said: “Kaduna Polytechnic has a department of Special Education. Bayero University has some level of preparedness. Federal College of Education, Oyo, has the best recreational facility for their special students and University of Ibadan (UI) was the first ever to start in 1974, a department of student with disability and the students were very happy then. But now, things are a little changed. UI students back then enjoyed some special setting. But beyond that, there is need to do more at all levels of education as students on wheelchairs currently go through a lot of harrowing experiences in these schools.”

  • Inspiring  street style

    Inspiring street style

    Ankara jacket, crazy wedge booties, ankara maxi dress and skirts, animal prints and more are incredibly what fashionistas are wearing right now.

    One stylish black blazer- It goes with most things in your wardrobe and transcends the trends. A great tailored and well-fitted jacket can be paired with everything from work trousers to jeans.

    Turtleneck sweater- Neckline trends come and go like weather, but a turtleneck sweater has earned its place as a classic.

    Multiple-strands beads or pearls necklace- Feminine pearls and beads are the perfect trend-proof accessory to complement your look. Wear gray pearls with black for a sexy tonal look, or choose layers of creamy white pearls worn with a simple black sheath dress for a perfect cocktail dress look.

    Large handbags- The bigger the bag, the better, and they all work under everything from cardigans to jackets or gowns.

    Pumps, crazy wedge soles and stilettos shoes- They are a great choice when it comes to looking kinky.

  • Obasanjo’s most inspiring letter to me, by Afe Babalola

    Obasanjo’s most inspiring letter to me, by Afe Babalola

    Though his relationship with former President Olusegun Obasanjo has spanned decades, the legal icon and proprietor of Afe Babaloloa University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe babalola, has never had his long time friend rain encomiums on him.

    Aare Babalola had invited Chief Obasanjo to his conferment of honorary Doctor of Law by the University of Lagos (UNILAG) during its Golden Jubilee Convocations on Friday last week.

    Aare Babalola, was Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of Council of UNILAG between 2001 and 2008 during which he won the best Pro-Chancellor and Governing Council Chairman award from the National Universities Commission (NUC) twice.

    Obasanjo could not make it to last Friday’s convocation as the day coincided with the launch of his foundation – Olusegun Obasanjo Foundation – in London. However, what shocked Aare Babalola was a letter of acknowledgement sent to him and signed by Obasanjo.

    “Of all my years of relationship and interactions with him (Obasanjo), I have never received such commendation. This letter, I must confess, made me feel highly honoured, and I want the world to see it,” Aare Babalola told this reporter.

    The letter made available to this reporter reads: “It is my great delight that I received the news of the decision of the authorities of the University of Lagos to honour you with the doctorate degree of the university at its Golden Jubilee anniversary celebrations. This is, indeed, very good news and I write to felicitate with you on this worthy recognition. No doubt, it is an honour well deserved.

    “My dear chief, being quite familiar with your abilities and achievements, I have no doubt this nomination is in recognition of your immense contributions and commitment to education and national development. I can testify that this award is well earned, more so by your contributions to the development of the University of Lagos when you placed it on a very high pedestal of administration and academics, to various facets of our country’s life and the role you have played and you continue to play in the legal profession as well as the political development of our great country.

    “I personally thank you for the support you gave me for the success of my administration and for the establishment of the Afe Babalola University (ABUAD), which emerged from your involvement in the University of Lagos.

    “To generations of youths, who have been directly moulded one way or the other, you are a role model; you are an example and symbol of what the young people could achieve with commitment to hard work and the pursuit of excellence. You are a reference point for distinction, diligence and devotion to duty as a great reformer which makes me proud. Your winning the much-coveted Best Pro-Chancellor and Governing Council award for 2005 from the NUC clearly attests to the professional, mature, forward-looking and innovative ways in which you have managed the affairs of the university as the Pro-Chancellor of the institution at that time, to the extent that the university rose from its unenviable state to become one of the shining examples in the African continent.

    “Before now, I was convinced that your place in the Hall of Fame was assured as one of the men who can genuinely be described as benefactors of mankind for your enormous contributions and for making the world a happier place. It is thus not surprising that you have been conferred with so many honours by institutions across Nigeria and Africa, among which is the Commander of the Order of Niger (CON) by the Nigerian government. It is my expectation that this recognition will spur you to greater heights in your service to Ekiti State in particular, and Nigeria in general and beyond

    “On behalf of my family and my own, I wish to congratulate you most heartily as you accept the recognition that is being given to you by the University of Lagos.”