Founder of Jed Child Trust · Advocate for Africa's voice in global humanitarian policy · Researcher in African relational ontology
"Justice and walking with the excluded."

*Chimamanda, Chinwendu’s dream*
"Working for dignity, plurality, and the humanity of every person.”



"I believe stories carry the power to reconcile, to inspire justice, and to connect people across oceans. Mine began in Nigeria, but it crosses borders."
I'm Eberechukwu, a humanitarian worker and independent researcher from Nigeria, shaped by years of grassroots service and a conviction that local voices must shape the systems meant to serve them.
My work moves along two roads: one beside displaced families, rural children, and communities at the margins; the other in the policy rooms and forums where their futures are debated. This space is where those two roads meet, a record of the field, the research, and the African voice I try to carry into global conversations.
Reflections on people and places, seen through an African lens — where research meets the field, and Africa speaks for herself.
A living journal of ideas from the work: rural classrooms, refugee settlements, development conversations, and international forums braided together by a commitment to justice, dignity, and African self-determination.