I write from Nairobi, where people have been dancing in the streets on this historic day of America’s inauguration of its first African-American president, Barack Obama. The Kenyans we’ve met have called him their brother, their son, and even the Second Coming. “He will bring the fighting countries close and end the wars,” a man told me while we were in Kibera, one of this city’s largest slums.
Though expectations of President Obama may be impossibly high, this inauguration has brought the entire world together for a brief moment of unity, hope and inspiration. I couldn’t have felt prouder to be an American, to feel so connected to Kenya, to believe more strongly today than ever that we can all become global citizens in the truest sense of the word.
President Obama’s speech carried so many themes that lie at the core of Acumen Fund’s mission. He promised more compassion for those who are suffering in the developing world, and recognized the power - and limitations - of markets, urging a new level of innovation and creativity as we solve the problems ahead.
Barack Obama’s vision is soaring and powerful, and he will need each and everyone of us, regardless in which country we live, to succeed. We at Acumen Fund will do all that we can to help and will do so with determined optimism and renewed effort.
Yes. We. Can…..
Tags: Barack Obama, history, Jacqueline Novogratz, Kenya


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