Kwani Trust - Supporting African Literature
 
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:: Objectives And Achievements

•  Objective: Harness the writers who are writing good work, but who are not being published and are not well-known;

•  Achieved so far : Over twenty new writers have been published in the two issues of Kwani? out so far. Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, who was published by Kwani? won the Caine Prize for African Writing 2003. Parselelo Kantai was short listed for the Caine Prize for African Writing 2004; Andia Kisia has been awarded a fellowship at the prestigious Royal Court Theatre in London; Uwem Akpan, a Nigerian writer using his Kwani? published story, has secured a place in a post-graduate creative writing programme in the United States ; his reworked Kwani? story was recently accepted by The New Yorker for publication.

•  Objective: Plant seeds amongst natural storytellers and young writers who may be raw, but who have something important to say, or a powerful voice, or even a knack for oral storytelling - a skill there is no shortage of in Kenya .

•  Achieved so far: Untutored writers - like Richard Onyango, the world renowned painter - have been published by Kwani? . In Kwani? 02, we have introduced an extended section in Sheng, narrated orally, transcribed and edited by MaShifta, and some members of the Mau Mau camp: all activists and oral storytellers. We have published stories in Engsh and work picked out of internet blogs.

•  Objective: Provide a quality reading experience for the Kenyan reading public in Kenya and abroad. Many say Kenyans do not read, that there is little of substance that is Kenyan, interesting and intelligent. We aim to change this with Kwani?.

•  Achieved so far: Kwani? has been positively reviewed in all major newspapers and other media in East Africa and internationally. We have been featured in the Washington Post , the Miami Herald and The Independent in the UK . Kwani? stories have been read on BBC, and we have been featured on international television many times. Kenyans have grown the embrace Kwani?.

•  Language . We recognise that English and Kiswahili are the languages that Kenyans are literate in at this level; we aim to encourage work from other languages that we shall translate and present to a Kenyan audience.

•  Achieved so far: Kwani? issue 02 has thirty pages dedicated to oral stories and rap and poetry in Sheng.

•  We are, and shall continue to be open to all potential writers. We spend much of our time meeting new writers, or potential writers. We feel that the industry cannot grow unless there are as many of us as possible working to promote a revival of our industry.

•  Achieved so far: Kwani? holds monthly readings at Club Soundd, as well as regular readings in a variety of other venues. These act as places where we can talk shop, share ideas, and encourage budding writers. We have open-mic sessions which are very popular with promising writers

 
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© Kwani Trust 2006 P. O. Box 2895, Nairobi 00100
Email: info@kwani.org