Every now and then we come across a heartwarming story that also makes us feel like indulgent, do-nothing slackers. William Kamkwamba was born in Malawi (a country that most of us geographically challenged Americans probably know as 'that place where Madonna's adopted kid is from'). He grew up in extreme poverty, living through famine and cholera epidemics, lacking the money to pay even basic school fees. A spark of scientific curiosity led Kamkwamba to the local library, where he began to research dynamos and electromagnetism. (This was despite the fact that the books were in English, a language he didn't speak.)
Then, like any normal adolescent would, he started collecting scraps of garbage in the hopes of jerry-rigging a windmill in his backyard. And guess what? The thing worked, Kamkwamba became world famous -- maybe you caught him on "The Daily Show" this week -- and now eco-warrior Al Gore is blurbing his best-selling memoir, "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind."
We spoke with Kamkwamba and his co-writer, Bryan Mealer, about garbage collecting, perseverance and why reporting on hope is a whole lot more fun than covering war and bloodshed.
Surviving a famine
Or they do, that is, until food shortages and famine send Malawi into a full-blown crisis, which is what happened in 2002. The price of corn skyrocketed, and the country's corrupt president refused even to acknowledge that there was an emergency. Kamkwamba's family survived thanks to luck and resourcefulness.
"That famine was so completely terrible, his family almost didn't make it," says Bryan Mealer, an AP reporter who co-wrote the memoir with Kamkwamba. "His mother actually gave birth to a baby during that time. She would nurse her kid at night, and her hand would shake. They were eating one meal per day, three mouthfuls of food. His dad went blind at one point because he was skipping his meals so the kids could eat. It's such a devastating time. That was the whole impetus and catalyst for the windmill."
Sneaking into school
Kamkwamba -- now 22 years old -- had always been fascinated by simple devices and how they operated. His curiosity was first piqued by the dynamo, a rudimentary device that uses friction generated by a spinning bike wheel to power a lamp. Like many children, radios also intrigued him, and he couldn't resist the urge to take them apart as a youngster -- mainly to determine if there were "people inside the radio" making all that noise.
Kamkwamba's family, like many in his village, was desperately poor, and unable to afford the fees levied by the local school. Rather than playing hooky, Kamkwamba found himself in a unique position: sneaking into class. He also depended on the local library -- funded by NGOs -- where he discovered English-language physics books. By examining the diagrams and translating important captions, Kamkwamba was able to give himself a crash-course in science.
"When he finally saw these books there was a diagram of a dynamo and how it worked, and he was able to grasp the concept of electromagnetism," Mealer explains. "He sees this other book with a picture of the windmills on the cover. It all came together. He's like, Oh, I can make one of these. He was 14."
Scouring the scrapyard
Faced with incredibly limited materials, Kamkwamba had to be as inventive as Edison and resourceful as MacGyver. The design for his windmill was cobbled together from a combination of PVC pipe, a tractor fan and bicycle parts."Over the next few weeks," he writes, "my scrap pieces kept revealing themselves like a magic puzzle." Kamkwamba's peers and elders watched on with curiosity and, occasionally, disdain. (His own mother's reaction: "Only madmen collect garbage!")
"I was encouraged by the picture which I saw on the [science] book," Kamkwamba explained to Asylum. "I was saying to myself, 'It means that somebody somewhere else built this thing. This thing didn't fall from the sky.' I know that everything has a beginning. When somebody's starting a new thing, there will be some resistance. People will say, 'This [is] not going to work.' The guys who made the airplane -- I also think that maybe when they started, maybe people were also laughing. 'How can you make something fly?'"
Against all odds, Kamkwamba's garbage windmill worked. It powered light bulbs in his family's home and later was able to charge cell phones. The 14-year-old inventor didn't make his creation to attract attention -- he did it to help the people he loved -- but in due time local media caught on. Soon Malawian reporters paid a visit. In 2007 Kamkwamba was invited to speak at the celebrated TED conference; a Wall Street Journal profile followed.
While his initial goal of using wind to power well pumps -- crucial in rural Africa -- remained elusive, it was Kamkwamba's first modest experiment with his windmill that would catapult him to international fame ... and a foundation, Moving Windmills, that would help him work toward his dream.
The inventor meets the war reporter
It was that Journal article that attracted the attention of AP reporter Bryan Mealey, who'd spent nearly five years covering a very different face of Africa: the ongoing war in the Democratic Republic of Congo. "I felt like I was chronicling death all the time," he says. "When you're a reporter in Africa a lot of people ask you, 'Why do you always cover bad news?' It was a really good question I never really had an answer for."
Mealey and Kamkwamba spent a year together working on "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind." The experience seems to have recharged the reporter, after the grueling time spent focused on carnage in the Congo. "I think we fall into this trap, as conflict reporters -- we cover these wars, rapes, massacres, but after a while we begin to see the whole continent through that lens," Mealey explains.
Africans helping Africa
"William's just one guy in Malawi," Mealey mentions to the Web site Afrigadget, which spotlights D.I.Y. innovation from the continent. "How many guys like him are in South Africa, or Senegal, or Congo, or Sudan? There must be thousands."
"Africans are so resourceless and so innovative," he continued. "People have dignity and they want to preserve their dignity. A man just wants to go to work and support his family. We always talk about [how] we want to save Africa, help Africa. Clearly it's not working in these top-down models -- just throwing money at the continent, throwing a bunch of subsidized grain, mosquito-net drives or whatever the hell we do. If we want to change that place we go in and find guys like William. We don't give him money, maybe we just give him slivers of opportunity. Some kind of leg up. People want to save themselves, and they want to do it themselves. Africans are very resourceful. They've become so resourceful because they've had nothing for so long. That continent is so ripe for innovation and design."
Kamkwamba is continuing his own good work, now under the auspices of the Moving Windmills foundation. One goal is to produce affordable, wind-power-generated machines that can pump well water in rural areas. He's traveled to New York and marveled over the subways and skyscrapers. "Before I came here the highest place I had ever been was on top of my windmill," he says.
From the Web:
The 49 Most Influential Men (AskMen)
Native American Mascots: Honorable or Ignorant? (Bleacher Report)
Beware of Turkeys in the 'Burbs (Burbia)


























Comments:
Add a comment
Monday 12 October
By megan
Now this is news.. what a great story.
Reply
Monday 12 October
By John
This is a wonderful, heart-warming story of how one person can strive against many odds and still go forward to success. I wish that we were all like William Kamkwamba!
Reply
Tuesday 13 October
By LaLee
Please don't assume that every white person is a greedy racist. There are all colors & creeds that are poor & rich. Here in America you were once able to achieve & strive for better things. Now if you do that they call you greedy & selfish. People need to be accountable if they're lazy & don't want to work...no welfare...if they're greedy & take advantage through illegal activity....jail time ...I worked hard all my life...I don't feel guity for anything that I have. I WORKED FOR IT!
Tuesday 13 October
By DC
It's nice that you worked for what you have. But, I hope you aren't implying that those who don't have are lacking because they don't work. Do you think you work any harder than factory workers in the midwest, or maids and street sweepers in the large cities, or bus drivers, or garbage men, or mine workers, or house painters ... Do you believe that it's all about work? Do you not recognize the fortune in being born in certain families and neighborhoods, and having easier connections to other successful people? The hierarchy of success in this country is not directly proportional to how hard one works. In fact, it's often the opposite. In general, the rich don't work nearly as hard as the working class ... who are struggling. I worked hard for what I have also, and I grew up poor. I also realize, however, that others who have worked just as hard have not had the same opportunities. So, no, I don't feel guilty for what I have, but I'm not so arrogant as to believe that it was all of my doing alone and that anyone who has less is just not as hardworking. I also believe that the opportunities I've had give me a responsibility to my fellow man.
Monday 12 October
By glen doll
Even as the article points out, there must be thousands of young men just like him who only need a boost to rise above their circumstances. What's wrong with "activists" wanting to create more such opportunities?
Reply
Monday 12 October
By abbyvlle
Maybe we need some Kankwamkba's to teach some of our people how to use their brains for something productive. Anybody can pull a trigger and sell dope.
Reply
Monday 12 October
By AliceBaggadonuts
MIT should be snagging this kid....
Reply
Monday 12 October
By Ariel
hey, i totally agree. he's really smart, to be able to make that from only diagrams and no instructions.
Tuesday 13 October
By HusbandlyOne
i agree, i wouldnt be surprised if he was on a plane right now to the states. HA. go boy go
Monday 12 October
By keith
Not to take away from this great young man, no food,but cellphones..?
Reply
Monday 12 October
By W
Yes Keith, cellphones in these parts of the world have become a lifeline. Folks have them not because they want to be cool. It is a necessity and this technology has made the world a lot smaller and is helping in some small way to level the playing field for our less fortunate brothers and sisters all over the world.
Tuesday 13 October
By Cate
Keith, you -- amd most Americans -- do not realize that land phones, which require a copper-wire infrastructure, are not used in most areas of Africa. So yes, cell-phones, because the towers are cheaper to build and easier to maintain. They need phones, and the only phone they can get is a cell phone.
Monday 12 October
By Denotchka
These are the kind of stories that I really like hearing about- it even gives ME break form all this scary jun that people are dealing with. Thank you William, you're a breath of fresh air in a stale scary world. Keep the lights on dude! Cool! I love innovative and inventive people, they make me stop and think about the possibilities that the Lord gives us and the abilities as well. William is one determined kid. He kinda reminds me of an African versoin of Abe Lincoln to a degree all politics aside of course. That kid is AWESOME!!!!!!
Reply
Monday 12 October
By Dan
A very impressive young man to accomplish all this with no money or support from anyone. I hope he continues to do great things for his people. One thing about these people that I absolutely cannot understand and that is, why do they keep having babies when they are starving to death ?
Reply
Monday 12 October
By Pierre
Because they don't have condom. This is Africa. They don't have enough food. You expect them to have money for condom.
Monday 12 October
By shirley
It is a natural survival instinct to replenish. Especially when you are the oldest people on the planet. And when there is war and disease, (aids put in Africa through vaccinations.) I am sure they dont want to become exstinct. Africa is the richest country on the planet. That is why Europe has been raping it for 400 years. And keeping it poor and deseased.
Tuesday 13 October
By L Sharpe
I guess they just don't believe in murdering the unborn. Go figure!
Tuesday 13 October
By paulajurisdoc
You my dear are a fool.
Tuesday 13 October
By Claudia
I have been to South Africa on a mission trip. What a wonderful experience. To see how these people live and what they are so willing to do for themselves, without government help. I am sorry to say, as far as the babies go, many of these people have been forced in rape or on drugs that they don't see the forest for the tree's. We must educate these people first, which then opens the eyes of the most vulnerable. God has worked so many miracles in So. Africa, that I prayed He continues to educate these people and remove them for all the non-human conditions many of them are living in.
Thursday 15 October
By gigi
Who has money for birth control when you can't afford to eat? If the country is in poverty, who has their mind on that? Obviously it's an issue that should be addressed, but there probably aren't any resources.