Youth Hold the Keys to a Brighter Future
Youth Hold the Keys to a Brighter Future
Opportunity awaits the 1.8 billion youth around the world, but many who are living with poverty and conflict face obstacles to pursuing their goals. Helping young people reach their full potential begins with promoting workforce skills, healthy decision making, and education.
“The future is brightest when young people have both the tools and the opportunity to build meaningful lives,” says EDC’s Melanie Sany.
Sany has seen this firsthand working with youth in EDC’s Akazi Kanoze youth livelihoods project in Rwanda. Breaking down economic and civic barriers empower disadvantaged youth to pursue their goals, she says. And the critical thinking skills embedded in the workforce training? Those are essential for a brighter future, too.
“It is important to learn a trade, but it’s equally important that young people learn to be problem solvers, in charge of their own futures,” she says.
Stephen, Halima, and Jean Bosco are three young people who have participated in EDC’s international youth programs. To commemorate International Youth Day, on August 12, we present their stories. Read what they have to say about their hopes for the future.
Aware of opportunties
Stephen Amenia Jordan is like many other 17-year-olds in Jakarta, Indonesia—he dreams of a prosperous future. His parents share that hope for him, too.
But Stephen is not just sitting back and waiting for the future to come to him. He has enrolled in a local technical vocational education and training school to gain the engineering skills he needs to land a steady job. And thanks to his school’s participation in EDC’s Accelerated Work Achievement and Readiness for Employment (AWARE) project, which links employers and vocational institutions, Stephen has already gained essential work experience at the city’s Ritz-Carlton hotel.
“My friends and I who joined the AWARE project are lucky that we received the training,” says Stephen. “We were able to adapt, understand responsibilities, learn to follow hotel procedures, and communicate with various parties in the hotel.”