About Us Menu
Changing Africa One Story at a Time
鈥淚 love to tell stories,鈥 declares 2010 alumna Deborah Ahenkorah.
And as the founder and executive director of , an organization that awards three annual prizes to the best authors and illustrators on the African continent, she has a powerful story to tell鈥攐ne of disappointment, faith, and grace.
A Childhood of Books
Deborah鈥檚 life has always been full of stories. As a child growing up in Ghana, she read everything she could get her hands on, from Bible stories to Nancy Drew mysteries to romance novels to Christian fiction. 鈥淚 had a very intimate relationship with books,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n reading I got to go on all these journeys by myself in my own imagination. . . . My head was such an interesting place to go back to.鈥
But books weren鈥檛 just interesting to her; they also encouraged her to trust Jesus more deeply. Though she grew up going to church and having strong faith modeled to her by her mom, being a Christian didn鈥檛 seem very cool to her as a child and middle schooler. But in Christian books that she read, 鈥渢he authors would talk about the deep peace people would have when they came to faith,鈥 she explains. 鈥淭hat made me yearn for some of that.鈥 She began to embrace and press into her faith in new ways.
Becoming a Leader
Upon arrival at Bryn Mawr College, an all-female campus in Pennsylvania, she knew she wanted to be part of a Christian community. At the recommendation of a friend, she joined 果冻视频. 鈥淎 lot of my Christian growth has been around community,鈥 she reflects. 鈥淭he 果冻视频 women I met as a freshman were these older women who were so beautiful and so happy and so real who loved God. . . . To see their life experience and have them share about it drew me into a very trusting family that I benefitted so much from.鈥
As a lover of books, Deborah was delighted not just with her mentors in 果冻视频, but also with one of its central activities: manuscript Bible study. In her words, 鈥渋t was incredible.鈥 She invited several friends to chapter camp her junior year, and started a Bible study called BOYL: Bible Study of Your Life. 鈥淏OYL gave us a space where we could take our friendship to a deeper level,鈥 she says. It also took Deborah to a higher level of leadership and growth in her faith. 鈥淚 started as a member鈥攂eing cared for and shepherded,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hen, as a leader, I became the one to care for and shepherd others.鈥
Golden Baobab Is Born
Those leadership skills served Deborah well in other arenas. While at Bryn Mawr, she started a student organization that collected donated books and sent them to various African countries. She realized, though, that virtually all the books they were sending were Western books鈥攖he same books she had grown up with. So she took her organization a step further, starting a literature prize, the Golden Baobab Prize, to encourage African writers to write children鈥檚 books.
By the time her senior year of college arrived, Deborah strongly sensed God鈥檚 leading to focus on developing Golden Baobab as a full-fledged, ongoing organization. She had no idea what a test of faith that process would be.
The first priority was finding funding, so she spent much of her senior year applying for a large grant that seemed like a perfect fit to fund Golden Baobab. 鈥淚 believed I had God on my side,鈥 she recalls, 鈥渁nd I thought I aced the interview for the grant.鈥 But she ended up not even making the cut to the second round. 鈥淭hat was a very big blow to my faith,鈥 she says. Having always been taught that if she worked hard enough at anything she鈥檇 get it, she couldn鈥檛 understand how she could have worked so hard and sensed God鈥檚 leading so strongly but still be rejected for the grant. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 even know what to say to God for a while; I decided that the voice I thought had been his must not have been.鈥
With graduation approaching, she began sending out applications for jobs, but nobody called her back. She also kept applying for grants. In the end, she received three grants for Golden Baobab that, together, came to about the same amount of money as the first grant she鈥檇 applied for. And the circumstances of these three grants allowed her to go home to Ghana after graduation, which would have been impossible if she had won the first grant. 鈥淚t was a very interesting faith journey,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淢y faith took the harshest battering, and out of nowhere came a better solution than the one before. I was happy . . . but it was difficult for me to go back to fully believing in God鈥檚 sovereignty.鈥
With her faith still a bit shaky, she returned to Ghana to learn more about the children鈥檚 literature industry and to continue to raise funds for Golden Baobab. She found out about another huge grant鈥攖hree days before the deadline. 鈥淚 applied to be respectful [to the friend who had told me about it],鈥 she says. But it felt like a joke to her even to apply, as she鈥檇 be competing against people who鈥檇 spent months working on the application. 鈥淚 sent it in and completely closed my mind,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here was no way I was going to get it.鈥
After each round of cuts鈥攆rom 3,000 applicants to 200 to 22鈥攕he was still a contender, despite her unbelief and comparative lack of preparedness for each stage. Hope but also fear of being disappointed battled inside her. 鈥淏eing in the top 20 was battering to my unbelief,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what to do. I couldn鈥檛 go back to not believing, because [making it that far] was certainly not me. I was competing against lawyers and business graduates鈥攑eople who were top dogs.鈥
The phone call that informed her she was was cause for rejoicing鈥攂ut, she says, 鈥渢hat left me even more confused. I hadn鈥檛 believed enough, and it wasn鈥檛 my capabilities [that won me the grant]. It was sheer grace. And I didn鈥檛 know what to do with grace.鈥
Changing the Face of African Literature
Now, several years into Golden Baobab鈥檚 life, Deborah continues to see God鈥檚 grace at work, providing what she needs to persevere and overcome obstacles. Twelve have been awarded since 2009 for the best stories in three categories: best story for ages 8鈥11 (Junior Category), best story for ages 12鈥15 (Senior Category), and Rising Writer (a writer who鈥檚 18 years old or younger). Stories that have been submitted range in genre from African sci-fi to African retellings of traditional fairy tales. are connected to literary agents and publishers who can help turn their stories into actual books.
Though the work is hard and the days are long, Deborah loves that she鈥檚 helping artists鈥攚riters and illustrators鈥攍ive out their dreams of being published. And she loves that children all over Africa are experiencing the power and beauty of stories told from their own cultural framework. 鈥淏ooks give you the power to feel so many different things out of your own imagination, . . . and to be the director of what happens in your own head,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o many children in Africa . . . have never had choices. But in books, they can; they can transport themselves wherever they please based on the book they choose. . . . That can be very special.鈥
Deborah still draws on the lessons of faith she learned early in Golden Baobab鈥檚 existence. 鈥淪o much of myself has gone into this,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut I recognize that so much of it could disappear. . . . I don鈥檛 have any control, essentially. I have to work on faith every day, believing that . . . God is sovereign, and that he will make things work out by his will and by his grace.鈥
For this lover of stories, that one鈥攖he ongoing story of faith and grace God鈥檚 been writing in her life, from childhood books to 果冻视频 to helping others realize their dreams through Golden Baobab鈥攎ay turn out to be her favorite one of all.