Malawian Teen Taught Himself How To Build A Windmill From Junk, Brought Power To His Village, ALL Learned From Library Books!

by | Sep 21, 2016 | Culture, Positivity | 20 comments

Get this boy in a prominent position, make him famous, let him inspire!

We are joining a call from Anonymous who posted a very simple message, they say the media is blacking out the importance of Malawian Teen William Kamkwamba. He taught himself how to build a windmill from junk, brought power to his village, learned from books he read in the library!

He was a simple farmer, he hadn’t seen a computer and certainly not many white people in his life. But his mind prevailed and his inventions made lives better.

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TED Wrote of him “At age 14, in poverty and famine, a Malawian boy built a windmill to power his family’s home. Now at 22, William Kamkwamba, who speaks at TED, here, for the second time, shares in his own words the moving tale of invention that changed his life.”

See his TED speech below, learn more about him and SPREAD THE WORD!

Read more about him here: www.williamkamkwamba.com

Here is what his site says about him…

William Kamkwamba was born August 5, 1987, in Dowa, Malawi, and grew up on his family farm in Masitala Village, Wimbe, two and half hours northeast of Malawi’s capital city. The second eldest of Trywell and Agnes Kamkwamba’s seven children, William has six sisters, Annie, Dorris, Rose, Aisha, Mayless, and Tiyamike.

William was educated at Wimbe Primary School, completing 8th grade and was then accepted to Kachokolo secondary school. Due to severe famine in 2001, his family lacked the funds to pay the $80 in annual school fees and William was forced to drop out of school a few months into his freshman year. For five years he was unable to go to school.

Starting at 14, rather than accept his fate, William started borrowing books from a small community lending library located at his former primary school. He borrowed an 8th-grade American textbook, Using Energy, which depicted wind turbines on its cover. He decided to build a windmill to power his family’s home and obviate the need for kerosene, which provided only smoky, flickering, distant and expensive light after dark. First, he built a prototype using a radio motor, then his initial 5-meter windmill out of a broken bicycle, tractor fan blade, old shock absorber, and blue gum trees. After hooking the windmill to a car battery for storage, William was able to power four light bulbs and charge neighbors’ mobile phones. This system was even equipped with homemade light switches and a circuit breaker made from nails, wire, and magnets. The windmill was later extended to 12 meters to better catch the wind above the trees. A third windmill pumped greywater for irrigation.

Subsequent projects have included clean water, malaria prevention, solar power and lighting for the six homes in his family compound; a deep water well with a solar-powered pump for clean water, a drip irrigation system, and the outfitting of the village team Wimbe United with their first-ever uniforms and shoes. Since receiving their sun and wind-themed uniforms, the team has been on a winning streak that has brought the village together with pride.

The windmill project drew many visitors from kilometers around, including Dr. Hartford Mchazime, Ph.D., the deputy director of the MTTA, the Malawian NGO responsible for the community library. Mchazime brought press, including The Malawi Daily Times, who wrote a long story. Soyapi Mumba and Mike McKay, engineers at Baobab Health Partnership in Malawi blogged about the article, and news of William’s inventions reached Emeka Okafor, program director for TEDGlobal, a prestigious gathering of thinkers and innovators. Okafor searched quite diligently to find William and invite him to the conference as a fellow. William’s presentation led to additional mentors, donors, and companies supporting his education and further projects.

William graduated from Dartmouth College in 2014 and started his tenure at Ideo.org as a Global Fellow. William’s time at Ideo focused on Human-Centered Design and sent him around the world working on projects ranging from sanitation in India to gender-based violence prevention in Kenya. He is now working with WiderNet to develop appropriate technology curriculum that will allow people to bridge the gap between “knowing” and “doing”. WiderNet will distribute the content through eGranaries around Malawi and across the continent.

UPDATE: William’s story is finally getting dues and you can read the story in the book The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, available here, or watch a movie version on NetFlix!!!!

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20 Comments

  1. Berhane

    It is amazing what the human mind can create if used for a good use. Congratulations brother and keep it up you have the mindset and ingenuity to keep going if you are provided with the right tools.

    Reply
    • Frankie Marcelline

      William Kamkwamba you are an inspirational young man. A world changer. Good luck with your new project, I hope you will come and tell us about it when it’s completed. Thank you!

      Reply
  2. Ruth Field

    Amazing. Many of us are better resourced than this young man but have not achieved what he has and certainly not innovated anything. What a great story of human resilience inspite of poverty and lack ????????????

    Reply
    • George

      Good story but lacks the necessary pictural evidence.
      Please update with real pictures of what he has accomplished and their locations.
      Thank you.

      Reply
  3. Jayson Jean-Baptiste

    Impressive

    Reply
  4. Dr Leonor

    I am So impressed God gave him a light and He had faith and perseverance. So happy for his recognition to help him along and further hus talents.

    Reply
  5. Haider Jafari

    A remarkable achievement by a youngster in a remote village without resorces.

    Reply
  6. alfonsokayabanmilla

    Impressive, inspiring inventor.

    Reply
  7. The Cockeyed Optimist

    Watch the great film of his life on Netflix. |It is called: ‘the Boy Who Captured the Wind’. He is pretty famous already.

    Reply
  8. vkta russian

    The boy who harnessed the wind…inspiring

    Reply
  9. Trish

    People don’t READ anymore ! This was over a decade ago! It WAS reported at the time. I challenge all of you to do a little research on it. So many lazy people – we all could be building windmills , or other things. Snap out of it !

    Reply
  10. Festo

    Where is he now.?.any new innovations from local windmill to modern?

    Reply
  11. Anne

    What an amazing young! If we all worked has hard as he does without excuses what an amazing world we would have.

    Reply
  12. Ayodele Adeyeri

    Inventors are born not made

    Reply
  13. josh

    wow this guy is incredibly smart but more importantly is two things the firs is he uses his intelligence instead of for himself but instead for others and second he actually uses his intelligence and takes what he has around him and defies the thought that you need money to do anything and he embodies human innovation ,intelligence ,and thinking outside the box this man deserves a noble prize for innovation.

    Reply
  14. Ntomboxolo Veronica Dyantjie

    Woow may God Almighty keep on granting you more wisdom William, you’ve done and achieved something that your government never thought of…God bless you and made you prosper in everything that you’re doing and don’t forget to praise God for the wisdom that He has given you.

    Reply
  15. Lynda McCarthy

    He is brilliant!! A genius!! God Bless his remarkable intelligence, desire to help his family, neighbors and the world. He is a true inspiration to all folks, including our future generations !!

    Reply
  16. Jill

    The caption about no one trying to make him famous is erroneous. There is a book and a movie already. A great movie. SOMEONE has tried to make him famous.

    Reply
  17. Muhammad Umar Chana

    Basically speaking this is an astonishing story of a young chap with a mindful for development how I wish to have thousand of them in my country Nigeria to help in dealing with our uncountable problems, I wish him success in all his undertaking’s.

    Reply

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