What if my roommate knew about my wonderfully ambitious hair braider, who has just started her own business selling hair extensions? Or about the millions of other Nigerians who start businesses and sometimes fail, but continue to nurse ambition?
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Every time I am home I am confronted with the usual sources of irritation for most Nigerians: our failed infrastructure, our failed government, but also by the incredible resilience of people who thrive despite the government, rather than because of it.
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I teach writing workshops in Lagos every summer, and it is amazing to me how many people apply, how many people are eager to write, to tell stories.
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My Nigerian publisher and I have just started a non-profit called Farafina Trust, and we have big dreams of building libraries and refurbishing libraries that already exist and providing books for state schools that don't have anything in their libraries, and also of organizing lots and lots of workshops, in reading and writing, for all the people who are eager to tell our many stories.
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Stories matter. Many stories matter.
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Stories have been used to dispossess and to malign, but stories can also be used to empower and to humanize.
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Stories can break the dignity of a people, but stories can also repair that broken dignity.
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The American writer Alice Walker wrote this about her Southern relatives who had moved to the North.
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She introduced them to a book about the Southern life that they had left behind.
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They sat around, reading the book themselves, listening to me read the book, and a kind of paradise was regained.
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I would like to end with this thought: That when we reject the single story, when we realize that there is never a single story about any place, we regain a kind of paradise.
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