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Powerful Women International Creates First Ever Kenyan Empowerment Event

Powerful Women International (PWI) has held its first Kenyan women’s empowerment and networking event at the Grand Regency in Nairobi, on June 28. The event was a landmark–PWI’s first ever outside the United States.

pwi.jpgPWI CEO and founder Valeri Bocage literally knows what it’s like to create something from nothing. She lived in New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina struck, and she literally lost everything. She began her life over again in the Bay Area in California, at the same time she did Landmark Education’s Self-Expression and Leadership Program.

“I was asking myself what was next for me and my life,” recalls Bocage. “I knew that it was to empower women. I did one event here in San Francisco to see how it would go and women wanted to continue. A few people told me they would follow me wherever I go, all over the world. So I had to create a place to go–And I remembered they did say ‘All over the world!’”

Before the Nairobi event, PWI had held six events in San Francisco and four in Houston. More events are now scheduled for New York, Chicago, New Orleans, Russia and Israel.

The origins of the Nairobi event are rooted in a trip to Kenya made by PWI’s New York Regional director, Jill Duvreuil, who spent six months in Nairobi and there met Grace Gitaka, the founder of the Wholistic Care and Counseling Centre in Nairobi. Gitaki founded the centre in 1994 as a safe place where women in crisis can locate food, shelter and loving support. It includes a clinic for single pregnant women. Wholistic has also opened school for local children whose parents have died.

Through Jill, Valerie and Grace began talking via email a few months ago, and bonded quickly. PWI committed to support Grace with the clinic and school, and Grace became inspired to become the regional director for PWI in Nairoboi.

Grace organized the first ever Nairobi PWI event, which featured speakers including Valeri and herself. Bocage also visited the school and clinic as part of her trip to Kenya, teaching the children about self-esteem. Through her connections to Bocage and PWI, Grace has become inspired to take on the transformation of her entire community, beyond even the clinic and school.

Bocage’s ongoing vision is for PWI to assist women in making their dreams a reality and to alter the world through empowering women.

“I believe when women hear the real life stories of other women who have overcome enormous obstacles to achieve their dreams, they are are inspired to achieve theirs,” she says. “But that’s just the beginning. The purpose of PWI is to connect women and men to support each other in achieving their dreams get that they can achieve anything. It’s life altering.” 

To find out more details about the Nairobi event, go to the PWI website for more details. Be sure to also check out Landmark Education News’ first story on Valerie Bocage and the founding of PWI. Bocage and PWI are also looking for supporters or sponsors who wish to assist in making a difference with the Nairobi Project and the PWI Foundation. Interested parties should contact PWI at 415-503-1184.

Valerie Bocage a Landmark Graduate who Lost Everything in Hurricane Katrina Sets Out to Empower Women


Founder and CEO of Powerful Women International (PWI), Valeri Bocage, tells her story of losing everything in Katrina to inspire women not to worry about things, but enjoy life.

Weathering the Storm
From: The Bay Area Business Woman
By: Julia Dodge

Valeri Bocage was visiting a friend in Bay St. Louis, Miss. — 40 minutes away from her hometown of New Orleans — when the governor appeared on TV and warned sternly “This is very serious — get out.”

“They tell us that every year!” Bocage recalls saying to herself at that time, as hurricanes are all but uncommon in the South.

A day later she found herself sitting alone in her friend’s house — her friend having packed her bags and headed for Colorado with her fiancé — having stayed back with the hope of reconnecting with her family. She didn’t know anyone in town, and had only $30 cash. There was no way to get out, no way to get to her daughter and grandchildren in New Orleans, and now she was watching people boarding up their houses on TV, preparing for what would be one of the worst storms in recent U.S. history.

She started to pray.

Perhaps it was divine intervention, but (more…)

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