Equality for All
Listen. Across markets, back alleys, community halls and living rooms from Nairobi to Lagos, people are telling themselves who they are. Equality for All was our invitation to listen more carefully. It began as a question: what happens when the people most affected by unfair laws, slow courts, unequal economies and quiet everyday exclusions are given space to tell their stories in their own language and in their own voices? The campaign grew into a living archive of testimony, witness and imagination. It is a map of justice made of sound, text, film and the rhythms of ordinary life. The work we published was never meant to lecture. It was meant to reframe. It was meant to turn data into faces, policy into pulse, and statistics into songs.
Stories do the work that reports cannot. They translate law into lives, policy into possibility. If justice is to be more than a word, we must let the people most intimate with its absence define what it looks like.
Africa is home to roughly one and a half billion people, a fact that makes the stakes of justice and equality continental in scale (Our World in Data). Seventy percent of Sub-Saharan Africa’s population is under the age of thirty, representing a powerful demographic force. Young voices are not only the future; they are the majority present (United Nations). Internet access across the continent is expanding rapidly but unevenly. While large national markets now count tens of millions of users, many rural areas remain chronically offline. Nonetheless, the use of social platforms and audio streaming continues to rise each year (DataReportal – Global Digital Insights). Most of the world’s extreme poverty is concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa, and this economic pressure shapes how people experience justice, mobility, and voice (World Bank). Public perception also plays a critical role. Recent Afrobarometer data shows that a majority of respondents believe people are often or always treated unequally under the law, and many perceive discrimination based on economic status. These perceptions shape civic trust and the appetite for change.
Today, the impact of ‘Equality for All’ continues to grow, with stories being shared in classrooms, youth forums, and community spaces, sparking deeper conversations and inspiring collective action.
Stories of Change: Journeys Toward Justice and Equality
Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal
The "Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal" folklore is one of Bhutan's multicultural tales. In the seventeenth century, a Tibetan Buddhist teacher named Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal established the kingdom of Bhutan. The tale claims that Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal arrived in...
Moon Festival
The "Moon Festival" or "Mid-Autumn Festival" tale originates in Taiwan. A traditional Chinese harvest festival known as the Moon Festival is observed on the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month, which typically occurs in September or October. The story of a...
Konda Kavum
"Konda Kavum" is a tale that originates in Sri Lanka. Popular sweet snack Konda Kavum is customarily prepared in Sri Lanka during the celebrations of the Sinhala and Tamil New Years. According to legend, a destitute woman who resided in a village created Konda...
The Elephant and the Six Blind Men
The narrative of "The Elephant and the Six Blind Men" is one example of a multicultural Indian tale. This tale is a well-known fable that highlights the value of variety and the various perspectives that people have on the world. Six blind men encountered an...
The Yeti
The tale of "The Yeti" is one well-known piece of Nepalese folklore. The Yeti, also referred to as the Abominable Snowman, is a mythical creature that is said to live in Nepal's Himalayan area. According to folklore, the Yeti is a big, hairy, ape-like creature...
Lviv Stone Lions
One popular story from Ukrainian culture is the legend of the "Lviv stone lions." According to the legend, the city of Lviv was once plagued by a terrible curse that caused numerous disasters and misfortunes. The citizens of Lviv sought the help of a wise old man, who...










