HOPE Founder and Chairman in South Africa to sign historic agreement focused on developing empowerment opportunities for youth and women
HOPE Founder and Chairman in South Africa to sign historic agreement focused on developing empowerment opportunities for youth and women
This seemingly happy family (meaning, they get their joy from their inner being, and not their material possessions, which were not many) in a township in South Africa live on the equivalent of $2 a day. I met this dignity rich family while touring Operation HOPE South Africa's work in the country.
The young lady in the middle, who is 19 and now attending a good school (which by the way, she and her family have to pay for out of their already thin pockets), is my hope for South Africa. She is full of hope and as smart as can be. All she desired was an opportunity, and she would do the rest.
The only time that she stopped and felt any sadness at all in our presence, is when she broke down and cried about the conditions of her township. How (from her perspective) elected officials care very little about addressing the concerns, and conditions that they find themselves in today.
Posted at 09:00 AM in 21st Century African Agenda, 21st Century Women and Girls Empowerment Agenda, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant International Agenda, Bryant on a Vision for the Future, Bryant on a World on Reset, Bryant on Africa, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Love Leadership, Bryant on Poverty, Bryant Traveling Man, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement, HOPE South Africa, Partnership with Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: john hope bryant, operation hope south africa, silver rights, youth challenges in south africa
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Good Afternoon Mr John Bryant I do hope that I find you well. I would like to thank you for sparing your time and effort to come and address my learners at Sandtonview Combined School, on Monday the 22rd of April 2013. Your presentation was so inspiring to me as the Educator/Teacher at the school working with the learners everyday and to the learners at large. Its always good to hear from the "best of the best" in entrepreneurship in the world. We as a school were so fortunate and privileged to say the least. According to your stuff members, this was a first in South Africa where a programme was started and we were first to have a one on one conversation with the founding father of the organisation. I would like extend my sencere gratitude to you once again for giving one of my learners, the opportunity of a lifetime, a paid internship with your organisation on completion/graduation. This has already motivated the youngster to even do better in his school-work and in terms of his behaviour right here at school. All the young business learners are so earger to follow in your footsteps and that of your partner Natasha Foreman. The opportunity that you have given these learners is on that they will never forget in their lifetime. In addition I have also learnt, in my personal capacity as an Educator, various life changing lessons through your presentation. Your use of Twee and George in the selling of drugs and their death brought tears to my eyes. You know why? Its just because I am sitting in this classroom in front of my learners, some of whom are already using these drugs and its painfull as you see them destroying their own lives and what you tell them they do not even listern to you due to a variety of factors. Sir, your example on pregnant school girls, a reality that I see each and every teaching day of my life. I keep hoping that the ones that I have managed to inspire and brought to Operation Hope's Banking On Our Future programme will be inspired as iI did and be able to take their lives into a better future. Alutah continua with "Operation Hope" in South Africa and through-out the world as it is the only vehicle that will drive hunger and under-development from our continent. May the Almighty protects you from all forms of evil so that one day I will meet you again and relieve to you my own personal life journey that I would have travelled. Regards Ganyiwa Isaac Educator: Sandtonview Combined School, South Africa
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Posted at 08:41 PM in 21st Century African Agenda, 21st Century Low Wealth Agenda, Bryant and his Vision for Operation HOPE, Bryant and the Forum of Young Global Leaders, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant in Remembrance, Bryant on a Vision for the Future, Bryant on a World on Reset, Bryant on Africa, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Dignity, Bryant on Global Citizenship, Bryant Traveling Man, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement, HOPE Financial Dignity, HOPE Financial Literacy, HOPE Global Initiatives, HOPE South Africa, HOPE Testimonials, HOPE Youth Empowerment Group, HOPE's Banking on Our Future Program | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: banking on our future, financial literacy, john hope bryant, operation hope south africa, silver rights empowerment for all, south africa
Marc Morial, President and of the CEO National Urban League, outlines his agenda for and around 2013 State of Black America Report.
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John Hope Bryant, founder, chairman and CEO of Operation HOPE, serves as contributing author to the State of Black America 2013 report, focused on "Financial Dignity In An Economic Age."
WASHINGTON, April 10, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --The National Urban League's (www.nul.org) State of Black America report released today concludes that despite social and economic gains, the African-American equality gap with whites has changed little since 1963—the year of the Great March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and the height of the civil rights movement.
To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Great March, this year's State of Black America—Redeem the Dream: Jobs Rebuild America includes a 50-year retrospective analysis conducted through the lens of The Equality Index®. The report shows that while the African-American condition has improved, including achievements in educational attainment and employment, this progress has occurred largely within the Black community. Double-digit gains in education, employment and wealth contrast sharply with the single-digit gains made in those same areas compared to whites.
Report more from the National Urban League on the 2013 Report release here.
See the complete report here.
John Hope Bryant is an empowerment leader, the founder, chairman and CEO of Operation HOPE and Bryant Group Companies, Inc. Magazine/CEO READ bestselling business author of LOVE LEADERSHIP: The New Way to Lead in a Fear-Based World (Jossey-Bass), the only African-American bestselling business author in America, and is chairman of the Subcommittee for the Under-Served and Community Empowerment for the U.S. President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability, for President Barack Obama. Mr. Bryant is the co-founder of the Gallup-HOPE Index, the only national research poll on youth financial dignity and youth economic energy in the U.S.
Posted at 06:56 PM in 21st Century African-American Agenda, 21st Century Low Wealth Agenda, 21st Century Mainstream Agenda, 21st century Middle Class agenda, Bryant and his Vision for Operation HOPE, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant Friends Making a Difference, Bryant on a Vision for the Future, Bryant on Bi-Partisan Public Policy, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Civil Rights, Bryant on Current Affairs, Bryant on Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Leadership, Bryant on the Global Economic Crisis and Response, Bryant Speaks, HOPE and Friends, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement, HOPE Financial Dignity, HOPE Financial Literacy, HOPE Office of Government Relations and Public Policy, John Hope Bryant Authored, Partnership with Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: financial dignity in an economic age, financial literacy, john hope bryant, marc morial, national urban league, operation hope, state of black america 2013 report, u.s. president's advisory council on financial capability
Bestselling business leadership author and philanthropic entrepreneur
I just returned from an inspring, and in parts equally frustrating trip to South Africa, supporting my on-the-ground team working for Operation HOPE, South Africa.
Inspiring because, well who would not be inspired by all that is South Africa. The cultural richness, the spirit of the people, and the energy present wherever you go. Or the natural beauty of the place, all the untapped resources, and the incredible opportunity to create real, even transformational change throughout the country. And all the stories...
The young boys and girls we spoke with me in a local school, who once exposed to the concept of entrepreneurship, vowed to keep both their heads and their grades high until graduation. They wanted very to become their own job in the future (owning their own business). Imagine looking out over a sea of young 16 year-olds, witnessing for yourself a new generation of committed entrepreneurs, job creators and leaders being born. Inspiring indeed.
Or the elderly women whom we met at a cheetah observation park who proudly announced to us that she had achieved an 'NQ4 financial business management designation' from the local Cape Technical College, allowing her to become (her description here) an "advanced and better skilled" small business owner. This wonderful lady was selling handmade South African products under a covered tent at the cheetah park, but for her this might as well have been a ritzy brick and mortar facility in downtown Cape Town. She was anowner of her own destiny, and she even made me feel this immense sense of pride she had, in doing for herself. An pride of creating her own job.
Read and comment on the full Huffington Post article here.
Posted at 12:15 PM in 21st Century African Agenda, 21st Century African-American Agenda, 21st Century Low Wealth Agenda, 21st Century Mainstream Agenda, 21st century Middle Class agenda, Bryant and his Vision for Operation HOPE, Bryant as Testimony, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant International Agenda, Bryant on a Vision for the Future, Bryant on a World on Reset, Bryant on Africa, Bryant on Ambassador Andrew Young, Bryant on Banking the Unbanked, Bryant on Bi-Partisan Public Policy, Bryant on Black Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Civil Rights, Bryant on Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Global Citizenship, Bryant on Leadership, Bryant on Love Leadership, Bryant on Poverty, Bryant on Something to Think About, Bryant on Success, Bryant on the Global Economic Crisis and Response, Bryant on Youth Economic Energy, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement, HOPE Financial Dignity, HOPE Financial Literacy, HOPE South Africa, John Hope Bryant Authored, Love Leadership Examples, Partnership with Community, Partnership with Government, Partnership with Private Sector | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: africa empowered, ambassador andrew young, banking on our future south africa, civil rights to silver rights empowerment, dr. king, financial dignity, financial literacy, jobs, john hope bryant, nelson mandela, operation hope south africa, youth economic energy, youth entrepreneurship
Johannesburg, South Africa produces 33% of South Africa's total GDP, and fully 10% of the total GDP for the entire African continent.
This is still one of my favorite articles. As appropriate now, as when it was first published in Bloomberg Businessweek. Share, comment, reflect, and let me know what you think.
It's time for a new movement.
If Bill Gates were black, it would be less important that President Barack Obama is black. This is no slight to President Obama. It is an acknowledgment that while the route to success has changed, for too many in the black and minority community, their game plan has not.
For much of the past century, African Americans pursued social justice through government intervention, the ballot box, and ultimately elective office. While the number of black mayors and elected officials in this country is impressive, the number of black entrepreneurs is not. As a result, job creation in underserved communities, and among the black middle class, is stagnant.
The main driver of freedom in the world today is not the vote but access to capital. When I speak of capital, I obviously mean financial capital, but I also mean the Latin root word capitas, or “knowledge in the head.” That means financial literacy education, financial capability, and financial and economic empowerment.
Read the complete article on Bloomberg Businessweek here.
Posted at 07:19 PM in 21st Century African Agenda, 21st Century African-American Agenda, 21st Century Mainstream Agenda, 21st century Middle Class agenda, Bryant and his Vision for Operation HOPE, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant on a Vision for the Future, Bryant on a World on Reset, Bryant on Africa, Bryant on Black Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Civil Rights, Bryant on Culture, Bryant on Dignity, Bryant on Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Jobs, Bryant on Leadership, Bryant on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Something to Think About, Bryant on Success, Bryant on the Black Consumer, Bryant on the Economy, Bryant on the Global Economic Crisis and Response, Bryant on the Subprime Mortgage Crisis, Bryant on Youth Economic Energy, Bryant Quotes & Bryantisms, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Bill gates, black entrepreneurship, black ownership, bloomberg businessweek, civil rights to silver rights, if bill gates were black, john hope bryant, operation hope
As I noted in another 'Solving Poverty' piece for The Huffington Post, the new racism today is actually poverty.
Yes, it feels really bad if a racist calls you a highly offensive name, but it is completely un-dignifying when you cannot pay your rent, make your mortgage payment, or you find that your car has been repossessed by the lender while you were sleeping. You can walk away from the racist. And more so, when you know who you are, there is actually very little the racist can say or do to change the way you feel about yourself.
You cannot walk away from poverty.
The reality of poverty faces you as a parent every morning when your child looks up at you for lunch money, and as you reach into your pocket, finding only lent and marked up job wanted ads instead.
Or every time you stop for gasoline and have to stop the pump at $6, or you're at the grocery store, intent on collecting the ingredients for that special meal for your family, but finding that you are $20 short and have to put the healthiest choices back.
Poverty faces you in the unfortunately regular arguments you have with your spouse or mate (money is the number one cause for domestic abuse and divorce in America today), or the first time you have to address your teenage child, whose daydreaming about which four-year college they desperately wish to attend. And today, what I am describing is not a 'Black thing,' it's a 'green thing.'
Whether you are white, black, red, brown or yellow, today you just want to see some more green. U.S. currency, that is. We are all in this mess together.
Read, comment and share the complete article on the Huffington Post here.
Posted at 05:41 PM in 21st Century African-American Agenda, 21st Century Latino Agenda, 21st Century Low Wealth Agenda, 21st Century Mainstream Agenda, 21st century Middle Class agenda, 21st Century Youth Agenda, Bryant and his Vision for Operation HOPE, Bryant as Testimony, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant on a Vision for the Future, Bryant on a World on Reset, Bryant on Banking the Unbanked, Bryant on Bi-Partisan Public Policy, Bryant on Black Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Civil Rights, Bryant on Current Affairs, Bryant on Dr. Martin L. King, Jr., Bryant on Leadership, Bryant on Poverty, Bryant on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Something to Think About, Bryant on Success, Bryant on the Black Consumer, Bryant on the Subprime Mortgage Crisis, HOPE 700 Credit Score Communities, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement, HOPE Atlanta Office, HOPE Center, Ebenezer, HOPE Financial Dignity, HOPE Financial Illiteracy, HOPE Financial Literacy, HOPE Forums, HOPE Office of Government Relations and Public Policy, John Hope Bryant Authored, Partnership with Community, Partnership with Government, Partnership with Private Sector | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: atlanta and the unbanked, atlanta in black and green, atlanta the black mecca, civil rights to silver rights empowerment, fdic unbanked study, hope financial dignity center ebenezer, john hope bryant, operation hope, solving poverty series
I am honored to be spending the week in South Africa this week, focused on our silver rights empowerment work at Operation HOPE, South Africa, being done in more than six provinces in the country.
While here I will be encouraging a spirit of entrepreneurship, small business ownership and what I call individual job creation (self-employment projects) amongst the generation of young people coming up today in the country.
These young people have benefited from the incredible and life-changing civil rights justice work done by the likes of former President Nelson Mandela, and my friend Archbishop-Emeritus Desmond Tutu, but all too often these same young people are not seeing that history and tradition translate into what I would call silver rights empowerment opportunities for all, today. And that means they are then less interested in school, less interested in their families, less interested in "doing right," and less hope for themselves. And the most dangerous person in the world, is the person with no hope.
Our financial literacy work started here 6-years ago has been helpful, and I want to publicly thank the likes of Angela Motshekga, Sean Cleary, Ambassador Andrew Young and former mayor Herman Bailey, all who encouraged me early on to start the office here. That said, it is not enough.
Continue reading "John Hope Bryant and Operation HOPE Team Visits South Africa This Week" »
Posted at 04:30 AM in 21st Century African Agenda, 21st Century Low Wealth Agenda, 21st Century Mainstream Agenda, 21st century Middle Class agenda, 21st Century Youth Agenda, Bryant and his Vision for Operation HOPE, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant Friends Making a Difference, Bryant International Agenda, Bryant on a Vision for the Future, Bryant on a World on Reset, Bryant on Africa, Bryant on Ambassador Andrew Young, Bryant on Banking the Unbanked, Bryant on Bi-Partisan Public Policy, Bryant on Black Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Civil Rights, Bryant on Current Affairs, Bryant on Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Giving Back, Bryant on Global Citizenship, Bryant on Leadership, Bryant on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, Bryant on Something to Think About, Bryant on the Global Economic Crisis and Response, Bryant on Youth Economic Energy, Bryant Speaks, Bryant Traveling Man, HOPE and Bryant on History Making, HOPE and Friends, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement, HOPE Business-In-A-Box, HOPE Financial Dignity, HOPE Financial Literacy, HOPE Local Impact, HOPE Office of Small Business & Entrepreneurship, HOPE Partners, HOPE South Africa, HOPE's Banking on Our Future Program, John Hope Bryant Authored, Love Leadership Examples, Partnership with Community, Partnership with Government, Partnership with Private Sector | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Angela Motshekga, financial dignity, financial literacy, john hope bryant, operation hope south africa, sean cleary, silver rights empowerment, south african banking association, south african government

Other key leaders join for critical dialogue about financial services for underserved communities on 50th Anniversary of Dr. King's Letter from Birmingham Jail
ATLANTA, April 16, 2013-- Operation HOPE will host its latest HOPE Forum on Tuesday, April 16th at the HOPE Financial Dignity Center, housed at the Martin Luther King Sr. Community Resources Complex at Ebenezer, led by the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency Thomas J. Curry, Atlanta City Council President Ceasar Mitchell and other key Atlanta and financial industry leaders. This discussion focused on how to develop financial services and effective new models to serve underserved, under-resourced and low-wealth communities in a new-era banking environment. To read the Comptroller's remarks, click here.
Curry assumed his role as administrator of national banks and chief officer of the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) in April 2012. He is responsible for the regulation and supervision of more than 2,000 financial institutions, managing over $10 trillion in assets, which represents more than 71 percent of the total commercial banking assets in the nation. The Comptroller also serves as a director of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and NeighborWorks® America.
Read the complete article here.
Posted at 07:05 PM in 21st Century African-American Agenda, 21st Century Low Wealth Agenda, 21st Century Mainstream Agenda, 21st century Middle Class agenda, Bryant and Friends, Bryant and his Vision for Operation HOPE, Bryant Blogging for the People, Bryant Friends Making a Difference, Bryant on Bi-Partisan Public Policy, Bryant on Capitalism for the People, Bryant on Civil Rights, Bryant on Dr. Martin L. King, Jr., Bryant on Leadership, HOPE and Friends, HOPE and the Silver Rights Movement, HOPE Atlanta Office, HOPE Banking the Unbanked, HOPE Center, Ebenezer, HOPE Financial Dignity, HOPE Financial Literacy, HOPE Forums, Partnership with Community, Partnership with Government, Partnership with Private Sector | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: civil rights to silver rights, dr. martin luther king, hope financial dignity center ebenezer, hope forums, john hope bryant, jr., operation hope, u.s. comptroller of the currency thomas curry

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