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Ubuntu & Youth Radio Reporters with Nina Callaghan
Manage episode 401927751 series 2862316
This week we're bringing back one of our favorite ever episodes. Today, we hear a fascinating and inspiring conversation having to do with the flourishing of young South Africans.
Today’s episode features Richard’s conversation with Nina Callaghan, former Associate Director and current South African Chair of Children’s Radio Foundation. In a post-apartheid country still suffering the social, psychic, and economic wounds of decades of institutionalized racial segregation, the very act of teaching these youth basic journalism 101, including ethics, consent, and truth-telling, is a powerful healing act. Callaghan discusses her work with the youth reporters and their two-year exploration of the concept of Ubuntu—a Nguni Bantu term often translated as “I am because we are.” Callaghan shares the program’s outcomes, both expected and unexpected.
Learn more about the Children’s Radio Foundation.
- Subscribe to Stories of Impact wherever you listen to podcasts
- More about this episode
- Read the transcript of this episode
- Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube
- Comments, questions and suggestions info@storiesofimpact.org
- Supported by Templeton World Charity Foundation
90 episodes
Manage episode 401927751 series 2862316
This week we're bringing back one of our favorite ever episodes. Today, we hear a fascinating and inspiring conversation having to do with the flourishing of young South Africans.
Today’s episode features Richard’s conversation with Nina Callaghan, former Associate Director and current South African Chair of Children’s Radio Foundation. In a post-apartheid country still suffering the social, psychic, and economic wounds of decades of institutionalized racial segregation, the very act of teaching these youth basic journalism 101, including ethics, consent, and truth-telling, is a powerful healing act. Callaghan discusses her work with the youth reporters and their two-year exploration of the concept of Ubuntu—a Nguni Bantu term often translated as “I am because we are.” Callaghan shares the program’s outcomes, both expected and unexpected.
Learn more about the Children’s Radio Foundation.
- Subscribe to Stories of Impact wherever you listen to podcasts
- More about this episode
- Read the transcript of this episode
- Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube
- Comments, questions and suggestions info@storiesofimpact.org
- Supported by Templeton World Charity Foundation
90 episodes
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