iCreate Magazine iCreate magazine volume 1 | Page 15

icreate Africa. www.icreateafrica.com Onyinye Nneli, 2nd winner in Barbing category Which impact did the iCreate experience have on you? Being a female barber in Africa, I was really stigmatized. There are people that look at you with so much disdain, but along the line I had to bottle up some courage and face this. This is not just a competition to me. I have been privileged to being tutored and I learnt also from my other competitors; the packaging, the courage, the finishing. Meeting iCreate and as Bright Jaja kept unveiling the plan he has for us, makes me speechless. I want to say thank you and I want to say nothing is impossible when you put your mind to it. There are no menial jobs, only menial mindsets. Which change do you want to see which will affect your skill career? We desperately need better 15 structures to attract loans for SME’s when skill workers want to set up their own business. Vocational schools are outdated in some sectors, so we are forced to consult the internet for personal development. What are the major challenges you are facing as a barber? We should open up and understand that our hair style is an expression of ourselves that does not need justification. Clients refuse to do some hairstyles for the fear of being harassed by SARS or the Police, therefore limiting our creativity as Barber or hairstylist.