Across Africa, a wave of determined leaders is striving to expand access to reading, education, and learning opportunities, often in areas where resources are scarce and traditional systems fall short. The five individuals below stand out for their work advancing literacy, technology‑enabled learning, and education access across different regions of the continent.
1. Rapelang Rabana — Co‑CEO, Imagine Worldwide (South Africa / Southern Africa)

Rapelang Rabana leads Imagine Worldwide, an EdTech and education-access nonprofit that provides literacy and numeracy resources across multiple Sub-Saharan countries. Her work combines digital innovation with grassroots outreach, offering tools to teach reading and writing, especially for youth and communities with limited school access.
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2. Orondaam Otto — Founder, Slum2School Africa (Nigeria / West Africa)

Orondaam Otto established Slum2School Africa to reach children in slums and underserved communities. His organization pioneered virtual learning classrooms, enabling hundreds of children to continue learning even when traditional schools are unavailable. Otto’s efforts show how community-centric and tech-enabled solutions can promote literacy and educational inclusion.
3. Beulah Thumbadoo — Founder, Everyone’s Reading in Africa (ERA) (South Africa / Southern Africa)

Beulah Thumbadoo founded ERA to promote reading culture for children and adults alike. Her initiatives include portable libraries, African-language story collections, adult literacy campaigns, and advocacy for national reading campaigns. Through ERA, Thumbadoo has helped build reading habits and multilingual literacy across Southern Africa.
4. Wairimu Mwangi — Founder & CEO, Literature Africa Foundation (Kenya / East Africa)

Wairimu Mwangi leads Literature Africa Foundation, advancing inclusive, quality literacy programs for youths and vulnerable communities. The foundation has built libraries, distributed learning materials, and provided mentorship and academic support across multiple regions in Kenya. Mwangi’s leadership brings East Africa into the continental literacy conversation.
5. Aaron Kirunda — Chairperson, African Spelling Bee & Founder, Enjuba (Uganda / East Africa)

Aaron Kirunda focuses on literacy and youth empowerment through the African Spelling Bee and Enjuba, a social enterprise improving literacy and life skills. The spelling bee engages thousands of pupils and promotes reading, spelling, and vocabulary development, complementing formal education systems to lift literacy rates.
Methodology
The selection highlights Africa’s most influential literacy and education leaders as of 2025. Criteria included demonstrable contribution to literacy or education access, broad geographic representation (Southern, West, East Africa), and diverse approaches (non-profit, EdTech, grassroots, media, extracurricular). The selection draws on credible sources including public records, NGO profiles, and media coverage, emphasizing current influence, organizational impact, and continental reach.
