Akosua Dardaine Edwards is the founder of the NiNa Young Women’s Leadership programme, a role that has exemplified her dedication to serving others.
This role has garnered her the Inspirational Emerging Leader Award from the International Women’s Forum of T&T (IWFTT) to be conferred in September, a recognition of her positive influence in the lives of hundreds of young women and girls in T&T.
Dardaine Edwards has spent over ten years spearheading the NiNa Young Women’s Leadership Programme, with her work in the field of social service bestowing various titles such as Social Entrepreneur of the Year in T&T and the Merikin Award for Distinguished Leadership in Women’s Affairs.
Growing up with the strong influence of her family’s matriarch, her grandmother, Dardaine Edwards, recognises in retrospect that a great deal of her tenacity and drive to serve were borne from observing her grandmother, who eventually became a counsellor in their area.
“She was a demonstration of independence,” she says. “I didn’t recognise her at the time, but she was audacious and made bold moves. If the road needed fixing, she would find a way to be heard. She spent a lot of time serving the community.”
Dardaine Edwards recalls that at a young age there was a personal desire to leave her village and see the world and so she took advantage of the educational opportunities that came her way. She pursued her tertiary education in London, including an MBA in Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development, and became an accountant, remaining in the UK.
In 2008, Dardaine Edwards returned to T&T with her then-husband and was appointed as the Chief Financial Officer of a company, feeling at the time that she was on the right and conventional path to success.
However, shortly after, in 2010, she lost her job, went through a divorce, and “began spiralling, unsure of how I would pick up the pieces of my life.” She returned to the UK to pursue a PhD, and it was during this time, while she volunteered with an NGO, that “something inside of me shifted, I felt that this type of volunteerism was what I was supposed to be doing.”
Asked to go to Uganda to work with a community to help them rebuild through entrepreneurship, Dardaine Edwards set off on an 18-month journey that would drastically alter the course of her life. During her time in Uganda, she “learnt so much, and it shifted how I thought about myself. It was only then that I was truly introduced to myself.”
Being part of the programme encouraged her to think critically about who she was, not who she was as tied to a job or a role, and how she could make a real impact in her own community.
“In my mind, I could honour T&T from afar,” she says. “But the people in the community pushed me to go home, and honour the place that I came from.”
Dardaine Edwards then returned to T&T and founded the NiNa Young Women’s Leadership Programme as a means of mentoring and supporting young women in their transition from the state care system to adulthood. NiNa provides financial literacy, entrepreneurial skills, emotional support, educational support, and guidance for women who have reached the age of 18 and are entering the “real world.”
The programme has four main streams of work: the School Programme, Jude’s Home for Girls Programme, Summer Programme and Transition Programme. With the support of grant funding and other donations, Dardaine Edwards’ mission is to create real opportunities for these young women to flourish, including helping them become truly independent.
The programmes incorporate confidence-building activities, public speaking, workshops on how to present a business pitch, and other skills such as making toothpaste and dyes.
Some of the highlights of her work are minimally tangible, such as seeing the young women learn to regulate emotions and change their habits, while some are significant to behold, such as seeing them graduate from university, leave abusive relationships, secure houses and manage their finances. As a social entrepreneur, Dardaine Edwards has to manage the fine line of dedication to her work, which can be emotionally taxing and ensuring she takes care of herself.
“I don’t play around with self-care,” she laughs. “I’m consistent. Every Saturday that I’m in T&T you’ll find me at the beach at 6 am. I also go to the gym, hike, box and maintain a daily spiritual practice that includes meditation.”
Being in nature grounds her, and she ensures to balance the rigours of her service to others with serving herself. Her role often requires her to mentor and advise young women, and she takes the job of giving advice very seriously, insisting that she does not give others advice that she doesn’t take heed to.
“Make yourself proud,” is her first tenet of wisdom; “it’s an inside job, and you have to show up and decide to be responsible, consistent, and disciplined in order to achieve it.”
One of NiNa’s signature programmes, Choices, reflects this ethos, that the onus is on the individual to make the best choices to make oneself proud. She always encourages women to remember their innate worth and to make decisions and pursue actions holding dear that sense of worthiness.
Akosua Dardaine Edwards is not simply offering lip service to women in T&T, but her dedication, passion, and purpose are affecting real change in the lives of our young women.
She keeps in touch with 90 per cent of the women who go through the NiNa programme and has found real joy in seeing how much impact her organisation has made in their lives. Honoured and “shocked” to be selected as a recipient of the IWFTT award, she is leading the charge, uplifting young women in T&T.