Oprah Goes to SchoolRead the whole article.
True, the world's most successful woman has always shared her wealth. But her latest project is really one for the books.
By Allison Samuels
Newsweek
Jan. 8, 2007 issue - Two thousand and six was the year Africa went Hollywood: Madonna, Clooney, Brangelina. And now, in 2007, the most exclusive spot on the continent will undoubtedly be in the town of Henly-on-Klip, about 40 miles outside Johannesburg. Set on 22 lush acres and spread over 28 buildings, the complex features oversize rooms done in tasteful beiges and browns with splashes of color, 200-thread-count sheets, a yoga studio, a beauty salon, indoor and outdoor theaters, hundreds of pieces of original tribal art and sidewalks speckled with colorful tiles. Julia Roberts, John Travolta, Stevie Wonder, Nelson Mandela and the reigning African Queen herself—Angelina Jolie—are expected to attend the grand opening this week. By now, you're probably wondering how much a spread like this goes for per night. Actually, it's free. There's only one catch—you have to be a 12- or 13-year-old African girl to get in. As spectacular as this place sounds, it's not a resort. It's a school: the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls.
Winfrey has spent five years and $40 million building the school to her own Oprahlicious specifications—did we mention the huge fireplaces in every building? The talk-show diva always does things in grand style, of course. But $40 million for a school for impoverished girls in Africa does seem a bit, well, extravagant. In fact, the South African government had planned to build the school with her, but it pulled out amid reported criticism that the academy was too elitist and lavish for such a poor country. Oprah doesn't care. "These girls deserve to be surrounded by beauty, and beauty does inspire," she says, sitting on the couch of her hotel suite overlooking the deep-blue Indian Ocean. "I wanted this to be a place of honor for them because these girls have never been treated with kindness. They've never been told they are pretty or have wonderful dimples. I wanted to hear those things as a child."
Oprah says she decided to build her own school because she was tired of charity from a distance. "When I first started making a lot of money," she says, "I really became frustrated with the fact that all I did was write check after check to this or that charity without really feeling like it was a part of me. At a certain point, you want to feel that connection." But there's another reason Oprah has put so much, and so much of herself, into this school. Like her students, she grew up poor—truly a coal miner's daughter—with dim hopes for the future. She was raped as a girl and ultimately raised by her grandmother. To a certain degree, she is building this school for herself: the plucky girl who became one of the most successful women in the world yet still feels that pain. I wanted to hear those things as a child. If she can save these girls, perhaps she can rescue that child, too.
I don't care what anyone thinks -- I admire what Oprah is doing here.
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Perhaps in order not to hear what anybody else things, you should disallow comments on this post.
ReplyDeleteOops. Thats "THINKS," not "things" -- of course
ReplyDeleteJust because I think what she is doing has value doesn't mean I want to take away your right to tell me I'm full of shit.
ReplyDeleteThis is Amerika after all.
Ahh, thanks, WH.
ReplyDeleteI'll be succinKt: THIS POST OF YOURS IS BURSTING WITH STINKING, SPLATTERING, IGNOBLE SHIT.
This is very inspiring news. Oprah is an Angel from God I believe. She has giving so much and still finds new was to give more than not only the average man but rich men. If our leaders can do a percentage of what Oprah does this world would be a much better place. Oprah has inspired me to not only pursue every goal in life but to appreciate everything that I have think with a selfless heart. This article should not bring your thoughts to judge or criticize Oprah for what she does but to ignite the God in you to become a better person.
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