Nombeko Nontshokweni
Nombeko Nontshokweni: PhD candidate in Education, holds a master’s in Public Administration from the University of Fort Hare. Founder of Isipho Equipping, a leadership and capacity development activator in the Eastern Cape with a nationwide impact in association with South Africa’s National School of Governance. Nontshokweni uplifts others through self-discovery and growth. She is the author of “uNobuntu,” a chronicle on life, work, nature, and society’s challenges, now adapted into an award-winning documentary.
Nombeko Nontshokweni
Justine Wanda
Justine is a stand-up comedian, comedy writer, and satirist who believes comedy can change views and grow people’s perspectives! She’s performed stand-up in several countries on the continent, including Ghana and South Africa, and she continues to push for the stakes in comedy. She’s the creator and host of Fake Woke With Justine, a satirical socio-political web series that provides hilarious, social commentary on the Kenyan and African experiences. She has worked on various satire shows, including News By The Catalyst and The Fareed Khimani Show. She has also liaised with feminist organisations and corporate entities on a wide range of topics, from climate change issues, election misinformation and disinformation to macro/microeconomics across the African continent.
Richard Ali A Mutu
Richard Ali A Mutu was born in Mbandaka, Democratic Republic of the Congo 1988. He won the Mark Twain Award in 2009 and published his first short stories collection, “Tabu’s Nightmares,” written in French, in 2011. His novel “Mr. Fix It: Troublesome Kinshasa” was published in Lingala in 2014 and has since been translated into French. Ali was selected as one of the only writers working in indigenous languages for the Africa 39 anthology, which showcased the continent’s most talented writers under forty, including Chimamanda Adichie and Dinaw Mengetsu. Founder of the Association of Young Writers of Congo (AJECO), he has worked since 2016 at the Wallonia-Brussels General Delegation in Kinshasa as Head of Letters and Books (Library). He is also the author of a recent novel written in French, “Et les portes sont des bouches// And the doors are mouths”.
Tevin Omwanza
Nairobi-based filmmaker Tevin is carving a distinct path in the industry. His recent directorial effort, “Stero,” garnered international acclaim with its world premiere at IFFR. He has helmed two features, “Kijani” and “Amandla,” for Maisha Magic Movies. Additionally, he’s contributed to productions like “Untying Kantai” and “A Better Life” on Showmax, showcasing his production acumen. Demonstrating a commitment to fostering the film community, Tevin served as the Kenyan regional coordinator for the Kaduna International Film Festival in Nigeria (2020-2021). Tevin is currently developing his feature film “Stero” while actively being involved in scripting his short film “Wote”. Tevin’s multifaceted approach to filmmaking showcases his dedication to storytelling and influence on Kenyan and international cinema.
Edwige Dro
Edwige Renée Dro is a writer, literary translator, and literary activist from Côte d’Ivoire. Her short stories and essays have been widely anthologised. Her interests lie in exploring linguistic justice through the English and French spoken in Africa. She has been on the jury of prizes like the Caine Prize for African Writing and the PEN International Short Story Prize and on the advisory board of the PEN/HEIM Translation Fund.
Edwige is an Africa39 laureate, a 2019 Miles Morland Fellow, and a 2021 Writing Fellow of the Iowa International Writing Program. In 2020, she founded 1949 the Library of Women’s Writings from Africa and the black world in Abidjan.
Alexis Teyie
Alexis G. Teyie is a poet, data scientist, curator, and publisher. Teyie co-founded Enkare Review and currently works with Down River Road (DRR) https://downriverroad.org/ and Karara Community Library. Previous books include a poetry chapbook, Clay Plates: Broken Records of Kiswahili Proverbs, and a children’s book, Shortcut. Teyie also leads research and advisory for nonprofits, startups, and impact investors.
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For positively impacting the world through storytelling in Film Literature, leaving an indelible mark for generations, Sihle-isipho Nontshokweni was listed in Mail Guardian’s Top 200 Young South Africans (2022). She is the holder of two master’s degrees from the University of Cape Town and Peking University in Beijing (Summa Cum Laude). Her creative endeavour began as a single story of “Wanda” and has since become a serialised storybook with international honours: Skipping Stones Honor Awards (Oregon, 2021) for promoting an understanding of cultures, cultivating cooperation and encouraging a deeper awareness of diversity, Best Children’s Book of the Year (2022), selected by the Bank Street College of Education (New York City, 2022) for its literary quality, excellent presentation, and emotional impact on young readers. Sihle has since developed Wanda into an annual festival, a Children’s book writing course for UCT and a TV Series line. Sihle-isipho is the inspiring force behind The Ultimate Book Show, operating as the Head of Production of this pioneering documentary series that lifts the place of Literature in society. In 2024, Sihle-isipho was awarded by EC Dept. Sports Arts & Culture under the film category for her contribution to film production.
Amitav Ghosh
Amitav Ghosh grew up in India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka and has a Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from the University of Oxford. He is the author of four non-fiction books, a collection of essays and nine novels. His books have won many prizes, and he holds six honorary doctorates. His work has been translated into over thirty languages, and he has served on the Jury of the Locarno and Venice film festivals. In 2018, he became the first English-language writer to receive India’s highest literary honour, the Jnanpith Award. In 2024, he was awarded the Erasmus Prize and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is married to the writer Deborah Baker and lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Aminatta Forna
Aminatta Forna is a novelist, memoirist and essayist. Her novels are Happiness, The Hired Man, The Memory of Love and Ancestor Stones. In 2002, she published a memoir of her dissident father and Sierra Leone, The Devil that Danced on the Water. The Window Seat, an essay collection, was published in 2021. She is currently writing an ecological history of the Great African Rift Valley. Aminatta is the winner of a Windham Campbell Award from Yale University and the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and has been a finalist for, among others, the Neustadt Prize, the Orange Prize, the Samuel Johnson Prize, the IMPAC Award and Ondaatje Prize. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, Aminatta was made an OBE in the Queen’s 2017 New Year’s Honours list. Aminatta Forna is Director of the Lannan Center at Georgetown University.
Lisa Oduor-Noah
With a growing resume of moving and energising performances alongside exciting recording projects, Kenyan singer-songwriter and producer Lisa Oduor-Noah is thrilled to share her craft with the world. Having developed a love for music at a very early age, her family’s influence was notable, clearly evidenced in her unique ability to traverse genres and carry an infectious cross-over appeal. Lisa has equally graced numerous world stages, such as Coke Studio Africa, The Global Citizen, and the Shanghai Jazz Festival, to name but a few. In 2022, the soulful singer embarked on an inaugural Australia tour, headlining the Sydney International Women’s Jazz Festival and appearing at the Sydney Women’s Club and Adelaide’s Nexus Arts. And due to great public demand, she returned to Australia in 2023, bringing the house down at the grand finale of the Canberra
International Music Festival, appearing with the versatile pianist Aron Ottignon. Her silky voice took over the Bondi Pavilion in Sydney on Make Music Day in a performance backed by Daniel Pliner, Nick Garbett, Chloe Kim and Jacques Emery.
Lisa’s eponymous debut album was released in 2022. A live album from her Australia tour will follow in late 2024. Vinyl versions of her work are also due for release in 2024.
A Berklee College of Music graduate, Oduor-Noah hopes that through her musicianship, she can be an agent of hope, healing, and restoration while creating wholehearted moments of connection.
Bernardine Evaristo
Bernardine Evaristo is an internationally bestselling, 2019 Booker Prize-winning writer of ten books and numerous other works. Her first non-fiction book, Manifesto, On Never Giving Up, was published in 2021. She is also a literary activist setting up many inclusion programmes for writers. Since 2020, she has been the curator of Black Britain: Writing Back for Penguin Random House, re-publishing books from the past. She is the current Literature Mentor for the Rolex Mentor & Protégé Initiative, and she has been the subject of two documentaries: The Southbank Show (2020) and Imagine (2021). She has received nearly 80 awards and honours, including the British Book Award’s Fiction Book of the Year & Author of the Year, and she has been on the UK Black Powerlist for the past four years. She is a Professor of Creative Writing at Brunel University London, an Honorary Fellow of St. Anne’s College, University of Oxford, an International Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, President of the Royal Society of Literature and the current President of Rose Bruford College of Theatre and Performance. www.bevaristo.com
Amamni Muthoni
Amani Muthoni is a 15-year-old author who has written two books. The first book, “Lia The Overcomer,” is a fictional work based on the adventures of a girl named Lia, who overcomes various challenges in her life. The second book, “The Cry Of Mother Nature,” is a factual piece that enlightens readers on the consequences of human actions on the environment and emphasises the importance of environmental stewardship.
Joumana Haddad
Joumana Haddad is a Lebanese writer, journalist and outspoken activist for human rights, equality, secularism and freedom of expression. She has been the cultural editor of Lebanon’s An Nahar newspaper until 2017. In 2009, she founded Jasad magazine- a quarterly Arabic language erotic cultural magazine specialising in the body’s literature, arts and sciences. She taught creative writing and Italian language at the Lebanese American University in Beirut, and she’s also been the administrator of the International Prize for Arabic Fiction since its inception in 2007 and until 2011. From 2018 to 2023, Haddad hosted a TV show on Al Hurra Channel, highlighting cases of human rights abuses and censorship in the Arab world. In 2024, she launched her podcast, “Girl Talk”, which discusses issues related to relationships, sexuality and gender. Haddad speaks 7 languages and has published 16 works in different genres, fiction, non-fiction, theatre and poetry, many of which have been translated into numerous languages. Her most recent publication in English is a novel titled The Book of Queens.
Kedolwa Waziri
Kedolwa Waziri is a queer African feminist writer, dreamer, researcher, polycraftual fiber artist, and grassroot community organiser at Trans and Queer Fund Kenya. They are a student of radical social movements. Their work lives at the intersection of social justice, art, and feminist politics and is an emerging voice on histories of marginalisation, identity, belonging, and digital justice.
Alex Gakuru
Alex Gakuru is the Director of the Centre for Law in Information Technology, a Technology Rights Defender that promotes the adoption of beneficial technology while highlighting its ugly underbelly. He is an expert supporting capacity-building exercises by UNESCO in the region and internationally. He is the CopyrightX Faculty Lead and teaches at the Kenya School of Law.
Since 2007, he has been involved in technology policy advocacy, legislative development, and regulation enforcement. Recent examples include engagement with legislators on the AI & Robotics Bill, Creative Economy Bill, Data Protection Bill, Computer Misuse and Cyber Crimes Bill, Copyright Bill, Finance Bill, Sports Bill, and The Public Finance Management (Sports, Arts & Social Development Fund) Regulations, among others.
Alex has served in many leadership positions: Regional Coordinator – Africa, Creative Commons from 2012 to 2016; Chaired Broadcast Content Advisory Council at the Communications Authority of Kenya between 2010 and 2013; African representative to ICANN’s Non-Commercial Users (2009 to 2012); and Council Member – Free and Open Source Software Foundation for Africa.
Gakuru invented technopolitics under the ICT Consumer protection framework from 2001.
Alex Gakuru
Shafinaaz Hassim
Shafinaaz Hassim is a multi-award-winning author and sociologist from South Africa. Her more than fifteen titles have received international and local acclaim. In 2014, UNESCO listed her as one of the top 39 writers in Africa under the age of 40.
The SALA and NIHSS awards and the UJ Prize for Creative Writing have commended her novels.
She is also the author of the four-book Nisa Qamar series for young adults, which has been shortlisted twice for the Minara Aziz Hassim Literary Awards and the prestigious Sanlam Prize for Youth Literature 2019. Darlings of Durban is her newest offering.
Hassim also presents a popular book review show called BookBytes, which showcases cutting-edge writing from local and international authors.
Jon Lee Anderson
An American journalist and staff writer for The New Yorker since 1998, Anderson has covered numerous conflicts worldwide, including several in Africa, such as those in Libya, Sudan, Somalia, the Central African Republic, Liberia, and Mali. He has written profiles of a range of political leaders, including Lula, Chavez, and Fidel Castro. Anderson is the author of several books, including “Che: A Revolutionary Life,” “The Lion’s Grave: Dispatches from Afghanistan,” “The Fall of Baghdad,” and “Guerrillas: Journeys in the Insurgent World.” He lives in Dorset, England.
Jon Lee Anderson
Tendo Deborah Auko
Deborah Auko is a trained lawyer but a logistician by profession. She is the author of Rough Silk, a renowned memoir of an ordinary person that has been a best seller and Book of the Month. It has done a US tour and a UK tour. It was the only book from East Africa selected at the Cheltenham Literature Festival 2023 and celebrated its first anniversary in a sold-out event of 500 people at the KICC on the 18th of May 2024.
Otieno Owino
Otieno is an editor and journalist based in Nairobi, Kenya. He was an Assistant Editor at Kwani Trust between 2015 and 2019. At Kwani, he was part of the editorial team on the Kwani? Manuscript Project and the Kwani? Journal. Otieno co-edited the Short Story Day Africa’s ID anthology (2018). In 2016, he served as Junior Editor of Safe House: Explorations in Creative Nonfiction (2016), an anthology put together by Commonwealth Writers, where he worked with editor Ellah Wakatama Allfrey. Otieno has also taken freelance editorial jobs from several publishers, including Huza Press (Rwanda) and the Indigo Press (UK). In 2017, he completed an MLitt (with Distinction) in Publishing Studies at the University of Stirling, UK, as a Commonwealth Scholar. He is an alumnus of the 2014 Africa Writer’s Trust Editorial Training Workshop
Edwin Omindo
Edwin Omindo is a teacher by profession, trained to teach Kiswahili and Religion at the secondary school level. He is currently teaching at KHUMUSENO JUNIOR SCHOOL in VIHIGA County under the TEACHERS SERVICE COMMISSION. He has taught for 15 years, 6 on BOM and 9 on TSC. He also works as a part-time teacher with ELUHOBE CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTRE.
Djamila Ribeiro
Djamila Ribeiro holds a bachelor’s degree in Philosophy and a master’s degree in Political Philosophy from the Federal University of São Paulo. She is the coordinator of Plural Feminisms, which comprises the Plural Feminisms Space, the online platform Plural Feminisms and the editorial label Sueli Carneiro, which publishes The Book Collection Plural Feminisms. She is the author of the books “Where we stand” (Yale University Press). She is also a guest professor at New York University (NYU).
Chidi Nwaubani
Chidi Nwaubani, the founder of Looty, is a visionary designer, artist and tech practitioner. His contributions have been recognised with a Webby Award and featured in BBC News, Reuters, and The New York Times, among other publications. As a Snapchat’s Lens Creator Network member, Chidi experiments with XR/AR to redefine art by providing captivating experiences. Looty’s genesis reflects Chidi’s vision to empower artists and reimagine ideas of memorialising history and culture using tech like the blockchain and NFTs. Chidi is a member of the African Futures Institute’s “Pinpoint,” an archive of the top 100+ innovative African and African diaspora practitioners created by Lesley Lokko. Chidi recently spoke at the globally recognised initiative Doha Debates and is currently exhibiting at the Venice Biennale, Architettura. His insights contribute to the ongoing dialogue about the role of art, technology, and culture.
David Olusoga
He is the author or co-author of seven books, including – Black & British: A Forgotten History, which was awarded both the Longman-History Today Trustees Award and the PEN Hessell-Tiltman Prize. The World’s War, which won First World War Book of the Year in 2014. Black & British A Short Essential History was a Waterstones Book Of The Year, Non-Fiction winner at the Quiz Writers’ Choice Awards 2021 and Book of the Year, Children’s Non-fiction at the 2021 British Book Awards. His other titles are The Kaiser’s Holocaust: Germany’s Forgotten Genocide and the Colonial Roots of Nazism, Civilizations: Encounters and the Cult of Progress and A House Through Time. He writes journalism and comment for The Observer, The Guardian, The New Statesman, The Voice and BBC History Magazine.
David is a recipient of the BAFTA Special Award, the British Academy’s President’s Medal and the Norton Medlicott Medal For Services to History. He is a Fellow of the British Academy, The Royal Society of Literature, The Royal Society of Arts and the Royal Historical Society.
Amets Arzallus Antia
Bertsolari (improvised oral literature, a kind of urban poet), journalist and writer. Amets was born on November 9, 1983, in Hendaia (Basque Country). Influenced by his father, he began to improvise from age 8. He did all his academic formation in the Ikastolas (basque language schools) and graduated with Journalism from the Public University of Leioa (University of the Basque Country). He occasionally writes books and gets involved in journalistic projects.
Amets Arzallus Antia
Ibrahima Balde
Ibrahima Balde (Konakry, Guinea, 1999) is a Guinean auto mechanic and writer. He wrote the book Miñan together with Amets Arzallus. He is the protagonist of the book who tells about his odyssey. The book won the Silver Euskadi Award in 2020. This adventure of migration has marked Ibrahima Balde’s career. The book has been translated into ten languages and has reached the whole world. Pope Francis has often recommended it.
Ibrahima Balde
Dj Miss Ray
Ingenious selector and dynamic curator DJ Miss Ray is not one to be contained in a genre box, although she’s been known to own the soulful, eclectic mix category, setting fire to dancefloors globally with Afrohouse, AfroTech, Electro, D&B, dubstep, Nu Disco, funk, and alternative music sets. Armed with pure raw talent and a great passion and love for music, Miss Ray is constantly looking to transport listeners to lush soundscapes and depth, as well as sharing in the healing and joys of music with diverse audiences.
Sarah Waiswa
Sarah Waiswa is a Ugandan-born, Kenya-based, award-winning documentary and portrait photographer interested in exploring the New African Identity on the continent. With degrees in sociology and psychology, Sarah worked in a corporate position for several years but decided to pursue photography full-time. Sarah’s work explores social issues in Africa in a contemporary and non-traditional way.
Her work has been exhibited around the world, and most recently at the Africa Fashion exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum. Her photographs have been published in the Washington Post, Bloomberg, and the New York Times, among other publications, and she has worked with brands such as Christian Dior and Chloe.
In 2021, she founded African Women in Photography, a non-profit organisation dedicated to elevating and celebrating the work of women and non-binary photographers from Africa.
In 2023, her passion for curatorial work led her to curate her first exhibition, “Sisi Ni Hao”, at the Goethe Institut in Nairobi, funded by the Ford Foundation. The exhibition celebrated the unique perspectives of 12 East African women photographers on womanhood.
Muthoni Muiruri
Muthoni Muiruri is a Nairobi-based literary advocate, entrepreneur, and publisher. She co-founded Soma Nami Books, an inclusive Pan-African bookstore in Nairobi, and curator of the African Book Fair, Kenya’s pioneering book fair spotlighting African writing and storytelling. With over a decade in the humanitarian field and a wealth of experience fostering literary communities, Muthoni is a skilled community builder, host & moderator. She is also the co-founder of Soma Nami Press, a dynamic and visionary publishing house based in Nairobi, Kenya, dedicated to amplifying diverse voices from across the African continent.
Andres Schipan
Andres Schipani is the Financial Times’ East and Central Africa bureau chief, based in Nairobi. He was previously the Brazil correspondent and, before moving to São Paulo, the Andes and Caribbean correspondent based in Bogotá.
He has also worked as a markets and emerging markets reporter in the newspaper’s New York bureau. A native of Buenos Aires, he graduated from the universities of Oxford and Columbia.
Sevgil Musaieva
Sevgil Musaieva is editor-in-chief of Ukrainska Pravda, Ukraine’s leading independent online newspaper covering politics, economics, and culture – and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Before joining Ukrainska Pravda, Musaieva served as a business reporter for the newspaper Delo(Happenings), the weekly Vlast Deneg (Power Money), and Forbes Ukraine, where she covered corruption in the oil and gas industries, among other topics. Under her leadership, Ukrainska Pravda’s journalists have continued their reporting efforts despite Russia’s declared ban on the publication and the dangers of frontline reporting in an active war. Musaieva was a 2019 Harvard University Nieman Fellow and is a six-time winner of the Presszvanie Prize for economic journalism in Ukraine. She also received the Anthony Moskalenko Memorial Award for contributing to the development of Ukrainian journalism. Time magazine featured her as one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2022. She also co-authored a book on Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa Dzhemilev. Musaieva is a member of the Crimean Tatars, an ethnic group facing persecution within Russian-occupied Crimea.
Sevgil Musaieva
Mia Couto
Mia Couto was born in 1955 in Beira, Sofala province, Mozambique. He lived in this city until 17, when he went to Lourenço Marques to study Medicine. He interrupted the course to start a journalistic career until
1985.
On his initiative, he returned to the University to study biology, finishing his course in 1989; he has since worked as a biologist in Mozambique.
He has published more than 30 books that are translated and edited in thirty different countries. His books cover many genres, from romance to poetry, short stories, and children’s books. He has received
dozens of awards in his career, including – twice – the National Prize for Literature, the Camões Prize and the Neustadt Prize, considered the American Nobel Prize. In 2016, he was a finalist at one of the most prestigious international awards, the Man Booker Prize. An international jury meeting in Zimbabwe considered his novel Terra Sonâmbula one of the 10 best African books of the Twentieth century. He is a member of the
Brazilian Academy of Letters. In 2020, his trilogy “As Areas do Imperator” won the prestigious Jan Michalski Literature Prize internationally. In January 2021, he was also awarded the Albert Bernard Prize in France.
He is married to Patrícia Silva and has three children living and working in Maputo.
Mia Couto
Ndinda Kioko
Ndinda Kioko is a writer and filmmaker with an MFA in Creative Writing (Fiction) from the University of Oregon. Her work has appeared on several platforms and publications, including The Black Warrior Review, The Trans-African, BBC Radio 4, Wasafiri Magazine, DRR, and Africa39: New Writing from Africa South of the Sahara. She has written and produced two TV shows for M-Net. She won the Miles Morland Writing Scholarship, the Wasafiri New Writing Prize, and the Black Warrior Review Fiction Prize. From 2018-2020, she was an Olive B. O’Connor Fiction Fellow and a visiting assistant professor at Colgate University.
She has been awarded fellowships and residencies by Blue Mountain Center, MacDowell, Yaddo, and Lighthouse Works.
Ndinda is currently an editor at Global Press Journal.
Anyiko Owoko
Anyiko Owoko is a Kenyan media and PR personality. Her contributions to the Music and Culture space have seen her rise to become one of Africa’s leading Entertainment and Music Publicists. Anyiko worked as Coke Studio Africa’s Entertainment and Music Publicist from 2015 to 2019. She also orchestrated Sauti Sol’s brand from an unknown quartet to one of Africa’s biggest music groups. She is the founder of Anyiko Public Relations – a leading artists & culture PR agency steering campaigns across Africa for international clients like Netflix, The British Council, and Universal Music, among others. She is also the creator of music & culture podcast VIP ACCESS, syndicated on Kenya’s Nation FM and Ghana’s MX24 TV. She also works with Goethe-Institut Nairobi as an events curator for Goethe Industry Talk Events. She was a speaker at Saudi Arabia’s XP Music Futures (2022) and South Africa’s Showbiz Entertainment Africa Academy Conference in 2023.
Ngartia
Ngartia is a storyteller interested in different media. He has pursued tales through poetry, screenwriting, acting, and short stories.
His work in orature has explored Kenyan History on stage, gaining prominence through a series of productions named Too Early For Birds—which he co-founded.
Ngartia has performed around East Africa and is currently dipping into writing musicals under the NBO Musical Theatre Initiative. His most recent project is Dai Verse, a two-hour-long poetry-based theatre production that premiered on April 21st 2024.
He is based in Nairobi, examining how our stories define identity while sipping on black tea.
Elizabeth Wathuti
Elizabeth Wathuti is a multi-award-winning and passionate Kenyan environmentalist and young climate leader. She is the visionary Founder of the Green Generation Initiative (GGI) and recently won the TIME100 Impact Awards in Singapore. She is the youngest Kenyan presidential appointee and serves as a commissioner representing Civil Society and Youths at the Nairobi Rivers Commission. She also serves as a Commissioner on the Global Commission on the Economics of Water (GCEW) alongside H.E. President Tharman Shanmugaratnam – President, Republic of Singapore, Ngozi Okonjo – Iweala, Director General, World Trade Organization, Professor Johan Rockstrom, among other Commissioners.
Mshai Mwangola
Dr. Mshaï Mwangola is an Oraturist who uses the lens of Culture and Story in her work as an academic, artist and activist. Her work is characterised by her practice of performance for research, teaching, and advocacy. Her artistic practice, stretching over 40 years of experience on five continents, is grounded in Theatre and Storytelling. Her current creative projects revolve around specific artefacts, lives, and spaces that manifest historical experiences in Kenya’s past, which illuminate the present and engage the future.
She served as a member and Chair of the Kenya Cultural Centre (KCC) Governing Council (2009 – 2015) and the now defunct Taskforce to Review the Kenya Cultural Centre Act (2022). A founding and active member of The Orature Collective, she sits on the Advisory Board of Macondo Literary Festival and is a member of the Creative Economy Working Group.
Peterson Kamwathi
In his practice, Peterson Kamwathi attends to various communal, social, economic, and cultural stances in contemporary society. He explores physical presence, modes of behaviour, embedded symbolisms, and latent meanings that are present and can be deduced from human groupings, social customs, and collective political/religious patterns. Kamwathi’s work has been exhibited in numerous venues around the world, and he was part of the Kenya national pavilion at the 57th Edition of the Venice Biennale in 2017. He has also participated in the Young Congo Biennale 2019 in Kinshasa, Congo DRC and the 8th edition of the Ake Arts and Book Festival, Lagos, in 2020. His work is included in collections of Safaricom, the British Museum, Bates College of Art Museum, The EAVAT collection, and The World Bank Headquarters, among others. He lives in Limuru- Kenya.
Mumo Liku
Mumo Liku loves the colours blue and green, but only in their darker shades. A natural-born organiser, passionate about entrepreneurs and their empowerment, he holds a Bachelor of Arts (Communication concentration) from Daystar University and an M.A. in Creative Enterprise from the University of Reading, U.K., as a Chevening Scholar. A huge fan of rice and coconut beans, he can also be found dancing enthusiastically, meeting new and interesting people, and generally adventuring outdoors.
Brenda Wambui
Brenda Wambui is a seasoned social impact programmes professional with over 12 years of experience across Africa, Asia, and Europe in feminist advocacy, governance, digital media, and technology. Her work centres on how technology and digital media can be used for advocacy, agenda setting, and policy influencing, aiming to promote equity and justice for women and girls, LGBTQI+ people, the youth, and people from the majority of the world.
Cyrine Ghannouchi
Cyrine Ghannouchi is an independent policy researcher and a Tunis-based consultant in program development and strategic planning, working with NGOs and research institutions in Tunisia and the MENA region. Over the past six years, she has contributed to the design, management, and implementation of projects focusing on education in zones of conflict, migration, structural violence, social movements, social protection, etc., many of which are led by the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights.
Cyrine started her professional life in 2010 as an architect, then gradually shifted her career prospects towards political science. She holds an MA in public policy and international affairs from the American University of Beirut (2021) and an MA in urban planning from the Lebanese Academy of Fine Arts ALBA (2015). She is also a trainer in Research Data Management for social scientists from the MENA region.
Cyrine Ghannouchi
Naddya Adhiambo Oluoch-Olunya
Naddya Adhiambo Oluoch-Olunya is an Animation Director and Musician from Nairobi, Kenya. For the past 15 years, her practice has toyed with the upper limits of form and function, spanning Animation, Comics, Games, XR, Product Design, and Music. She cultivates slate originals under her Nalo Studios banner and has led her team through service work for Walt Disney Animation, Netflix Animation, Nickelodeon, and many more.
Stanley Gazemba
Stanley Gazemba’s breakthrough novel, ‘The Stone Hills of Maragoli’, published in the USA as ‘Forbidden Fruit’ (The Mantle Press), won the Jomo Kenyatta Prize for Kenyan Literature in 2003. He is also the author of the short-story collection ‘Dog Meat Samosa’ (Regal House Publishing, 2019) and ‘Khama’ (The Mantle, 2020), which was shortlisted for the Wilbur and Niso Smith Adventure Writing Prize, ‘Callused Hands’, among other novels. His latest novel, ‘Footprints in the Sand’ was published in Sweden in 2021. In addition, he has written several children’s books, including A Scare in the Village (OUP, 2005), which won the Jomo Kenyatta Prize.
Stanley’s prolific writings and stories have appeared in several international publications, including The New York Times, ‘A’ is for Ancestors, the Caine Prize Anthology, World Literature Today, and The East African magazine. Stanley lives in Nairobi, and his short story, ‘Talking Money,’ was recently published in ‘Africa 39, ‘ a Hay Festival publication released in 2014. Published by Bloomsbury Publishing Inc., ‘Africa 39’ features a collection of 39 short stories by some of Africa’s leading contemporary authors. Stanley is also in the process of working on an array of creative literary projects.
Zakaria Ibrahimi
Zakaria Ibrahimi is a Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Cadi Ayyad University in Marrakech, Morocco. He is also a founding member of the Awal Center for Contemporary Studies and an expert on resources, kinetics, and gravity. Zakaria’s interest in the environment, the ecological crisis, and green movements has led him to publish “Michaut Belaire,” “Does Morocco have green movements?,” and “Health and Society” with various publishing houses. He is co-writing “A beginner’s guide to environmental sociology: concepts and approaches.”
Zakaria Ibrahimi
Richard Njau
Richard is a passionate and experienced Digital Enabler with 23 years of expertise in driving positive transformations through digital platforms. He is skilled in digital content creation, social media management, digital strategy, and advertising. He is currently CEO of MWAPI Entertainment LTD and founder/host of CTA—Cleaning The Airwaves.
Aleya Kassam
Aleya is a multi-disciplinary writer and performer whose work explores the spaces between imagination and memory, often using ritual to access those realms.
Her theatrical work includes:
-Haldi and Honey, tracing the journey of a woman’s experience with grief across ancestry.
-The Hummingbird’s Ululation and Listen to Vanessa Nakate, commissioned by Climate Change Theatre Action
-100 Years of Samosas: An East African Story, a one-woman performance sharing the epic story of one family across generations
-The Interview investigates the relationships between worlds and our human contract with the ones we share this earth with commissioned by The NYUAD Arts Centre.
Aleya is also co-founder of The LAM Sisterhood, which fills the world with stories for African women to feel seen, heard, and beloved. These stories include the stage show Brazen and the award-winning multilingual children’s podcast KaBrazen, which mythologises the lives of brazen African women.
Lola Shoneyin
Lola Shoneyin is a Nigerian author, poet, publisher, bookseller, festival organiser and cultural activist. Her works include a novel, three collections of poems and seven children’s books. She is the founder of the Ake Arts & Book Festival and she curates the Kaduna Book & Arts Festival. In 2023, she was the recipient of the inaugural Aficionado Award. She was also featured on the FT’s list of the most influential women of 2023. Shoneyin lives and works in Lagos, Nigeria.
Lola Shoneyin
Wanjeri Gakuru
Wanjeri Gakuru is a freelance journalist, essayist and filmmaker. She was appointed the 2018 Literary Ambassador for Nairobi by Panorama: The Journal of Intelligent Travel and is a 2021 Baraza Media-Fringe Graph Fellow. A cross-section of her writing has appeared in Transition Magazine, CNN, The Sunday Times, Nataal, LA Times Magazine, Monocle and The Africa Report among others. She has film and TV projects on both Netflix and Showmax. Wanjeri has contributed variously to curatorial projects and publications including Just A Book (Goethe-Institut Kenya, 2016), #RafikiZetu: Kenyan LGBTIQ Stories, as told, by Allies (Denis Nzioka, 2019), Family Matters (Goethe-Institut Namibia, 2021), Archive of Forgetfulness (2022) and Love Letters to Cinema (2022). She is the Curator of the 2023 and 2024 NBO Litfest.
Wanjeri Gakuru
Adania Shibli
Adania Shibli (Palestine, 1974) has written novels, plays, short stories and narrative essays. She has twice been awarded with the Qattan Young Writer’s Award-Palestine in 2001 on her novel Masaas (Al-Adab, 2002; translated as Touch, Clockroot, 2009), and in 2003 on her novel Kulluna Ba’id bethat al Miqdar aan el-Hub (Al-Adab, 2004; translated as We Are All Equally Far from Love, Clockroot, 2012). Her latest is the novel Tafsil Thanawi (Al-Adab, 2017, translated as Minor Detail, Fitzcarraldo Edition/UK, and New Directions/USA, 2020), which was shortlisted for the National Book Award in 2020, and in 2021 it was nominated for the International Booker Prize. Shibli is also engaged in academic research and teaching in different universities across Europe, as well as at Birzeit University, Palestine (2012-2018).