Founder's Vision
As a young African girl, Esther had her secondary education in the first and most prestigious girls Secondary School in Cameroon, Queen of the Rosary College, Okoyong. The role her mother played, though uneducated, to ensure her secondary education in this prestigious institution is engraved in her memory. Her father, a teacher, wanted her to study in a Government (Public) Secondary School which is less expensive but with little emphasis laid on morals. Esther’s mother did not hesitate to exhaust all her little earnings to ensure that her daughter, though of humble background, gets the same opportunity with girls from elitist families. Esther saw how committed and dedicated mothers could be to their children, ready to go to all lengths for their kids.
Esther’s experience as a Deputy State Prosecutor and a Judge has given her the opportunity to experience, first hand, the discrimination and mistreatment of women and children. The high levels of illiteracy among women in Cameroon and discriminatory traditional practices have contributed greatly to unequal status of men and women. Most women do not know their basic rights as spouses or partners, and so cannot assert themselves. I realized that there were many cases where women who sought redress did not have a good case because of the absence of documentary evidence, e.g., the non possession of a marriage certificate.
I also had many cases of women who cannot speak out because they rely on the men for subsistence; so most perpetrators of violence against women cannot be brought to justice.