Wednesday 20 May 2015

AN INTERLOCUTION WITH MAHMOUD JAJAH


Maazi Okoro: Salaam Alaykum
Mahmoud Jajah: Wa Alaykum Salaam
Maazi Okoro: I must confess that your website serves as a treasure of knowledge and ideas for me every day, massive write-up there. We need more!   
Mahmoud Jajah : Insha Allah this time I want to write more. At least every week. We need to lift our youth. We have a lot of work to do.  So in our own small ways, we've got to fire the youth up.
Maazi Okoro: Onerous task indeed.  I have never had the opportunity to ask   you this. What inspires you?
Mahmoud Jajah : Wow! Can I really answer that question?
Mahmoud Jajah: I guess I was born to make some significant impact in my society. And to make the statement that no matter where u come from u can still achieve greatness! I have some huge dreams I want to achieve. I've not even started yet.
Maazi Okoro : Not started yet?
Mahmoud Jajah:  May be I'm just about starting out but I’m not sure I've started. I want every young boy or girl from the ghettoes and the slums to look at me and say “if this guy has done it, then I can also do it”! That’s all!
Maazi Okoro:  Massive! What inspires you to read and what inspires you to read more?
Mahmoud Jajah:  It's simple; ignorance can never defeat knowledge.  And u gain knowledge by reading. So the more u read, the more confident you become in your abilities. You become fearless. Because whenever u see fear, then it means someone didn't do his homework well. And long ago, I made a promise to become one of the most well informed people in the world. So I make sure that I read things that about 90% of the people will not read.  It makes me stay ahead always. And people respect u for your opinions on issues. So basically that is it.
Maazi Okoro: Massive! Have u ever had any fear?
Mahmoud Jajah:  I used to have fears until I started reading wide. I still have some fears, but not serious ones. But when it comes to big things, I'm fearless. I'm ready to make mistakes and to learn from my mistakes. I've studied how people have overcome their fears, and learned from that

Maazi Okoro:  Which particular fear have you ever had that it turned out not have materialized?

Mahmoud Jajah: I've to think about this. I'm sorry for now I can't think of one. May be later when I remember I will let u know. And that is one lesson I've learnt in life: if you don't know something or cannot remember something, please own up!

Maazi Okoro: How will you describe yourself in terms of profession?

Mahmoud Jajah:  In terms of profession I will say I'm an administrator because
of what I'm currently doing in Riyadh.
But my ambition in life is to become a BILLIONAIRE BUSINESSMAN
Maazi Okoro: Any failures in life?
Mahmoud Jajah: I call them lessons...and I've made a lot. The biggest regret, unfortunately, is a personal one. I would like to keep it classified, for some reasons. I've not had any huge public failure in life...yet. But I know it's coming soon because of the size of what I'm planning to do next. But for now it's a personal failure. Perhaps another failure which I think it's ok to say is the fact that I couldn't go far with my Islamic education. I should have gone far but for some reasons I dropped out. But I'm coming back strongly, insha Allah.

Maazi Okoro: I love that! You formed how many organizations?

Mahmoud Jajah: I formed six organizations. Four non-profit. Two profit. Two are currently defunct. Three are currently active. One inactive. And In sha Allah I hope to establish more profit making organizations
Maazi Okoro: What are the names of the various organizations, the defunct, active and inactive one?
Mahmoud Jajah:  Active: Fortune Investment Club, Amanah Energy Limited. Inactive: AVERT Youth Foundation, Initiative for Youth Development
Defunct: Success Book Club, Mahlid Communications.

Maazi Okoro:  What do you see as the problem with the youth of Nima/Maamobi And for that matter Ghana as a whole?

Mahmoud Jajah: We have many problems and challenges. For the youth of Nima & Maamobi, our main problem is the fact that our community leaders over the years have failed to develop for us a comprehensive development program where young people will receive some form of mentoring and counselling about our career choices. Most of the youth who have gone wayward in Nima should not be entirely blamed. The light you see is the light you appreciate. If young people are raised in the kind of environment we have in Nima, then we will continue to get what we've been getting out of Nima.
Maazi Okoro:  That is an interesting perspective.
Mahmoud Jajah: Very few young people in Nima do have some form of direction because of a relative who has seen some bright light. Majority do not have that privilege. So the youth will do anything and everything to live. That is my view.
Maazi Okoro: By community leaders, who do you mean?
Mahmoud Jajah: All our duty bearers, but especially our Imams, Chiefs, and politicians (the MPs and the Assembly members). You can add youth leaders and parents as well.
Maazi Okoro: You wrote an article" If we are not careful, Nima and Maamobi will collapse" long before the current 'insanity' of youth making graffiti on our streets, fighting between well-entrenched groups with deep-seated enmity all clamouring for their various Dancehall artistes with specific reference to Ruddest Movement  and Platinum Minds  in Maamobi. Do you think Nima- Maamobi is beyond redemption now?
Mahmoud Jajah: I wrote in that piece "the inability of our leaders and duty bearers to address these issues facing the youth of these communities is troubling. Our leaders are yet to come together in any forum whatsoever to discuss how to address and tackle these challenges of our future leaders. The best that has been done is to talk about it, and nothing more. One would have expected that our chiefs and religious leaders especially, will take on these issues and begin to address them. For now, those of us concerned can only draw the attention of our duty bearers to act and act quickly before things get out of hands." Basically what it means is that unless you have an action plan and programme, things will continue to get worse. No civilized society anywhere in the world has been able to develop by accident. Development is a conscious process through planning. Currently we don’t have any plan in place. So I'm sorry things will only continue to get worse. http://mahmoudjajah.com/2014/05/24/if-we-are-not-careful-nima-maamobi-will-collapse/

Maazi Okoro: Are the educated ones also to be blamed?
Mahmoud Jajah: To a large extent, yes! To all intents and purposes, our society is yet to feel the impact and the benefits of our education. We've not transformed anything yet.
Maazi Okoro: Which personalities have influenced your life massively?
Mahmoud Jajah: I have a tall list because I pick lessons from quite a number of personalities. But first things first, there was a guy in Maamobi called Labaran Toure (who is now a PhD student in the UK). He opened my eyes. I got my first copy of  The Magic of Thinking Big from him when I was sweeping his room for him as far back as the year 2003.
Maazi Okoro: I will love to meet him.
Mahmoud Jajah: It was him who introduced me to that book that made me to review my life goals.  He owns Imlabs Communications Centre at Maamobi opposite Bama photocopies. He is like a blood brother to me. It was the book that made me develop confidence. So he has influenced my life. Another personality is Lawyer Buabeng Asamoah of the NPP. He is my boss. When i told him i wanted to become a lawyer one day, he told me to go out and read EVERYTHING that i come across! I will never forget that ever. I started developing the habit of reading since that time, in 2003/2004
Maazi Okoro: Okay! Anymore?
Mahmoud Jajah: I think the rest are most individuals that i have read about, or meet in my life.  So for now I will mention just the two. They where my springboard!
Maazi Okoro: Which books will you always mention?
Mahmoud Jajah: Aside the Noble Quran, I will mention the following books;
1.The Magic of Thinking Big
2. All books written by Robin Sharma
3. All books written by John C. Maxwell
4. All books written by Donald Trump
5. Bloomberg by Bloomberg written by the former billionaire mayor of NYC
6. The Snowball; biography of Warren Buffett:
The books are many but these ones will do for now.
Maazi Okoro : How do you feel when you put down a book after reading it?
Mahmoud Jajah:  It depends on the book. There are books that I read at least twice every year. Those books, I feel renewed each time i read them. Some make me feel disappointed because I have not practicalized the ideas from those books.
Maazi Okoro: Any example of such books?
Mahmoud Jajah:
1. The Magic of Thinking Big
2. Greatness Guide 1 & 2
3. Leadership Wisdom from the Monk who sold his Ferrari
4. The monk who sold his Ferrari
5. Rich Dad Poor Dad
6. Trump 101 by Donald Trump
You know the other authors that i didn’t mentioned above
Maazi Okoro:  What is your view on level of education among our students? Considering the Award winning article you wrote in 2009?                                                        
Mahmoud Jajah: I believe our youth are poorly educated, whether they've been to school or not. Even those with University qualifications are nothing to write home about. Education must make sense. In other words, it must transform you and your environment. If you are highly educated, and by that I mean if you have a university degree, and you still cannot find your way into the world, then it means there is a problem with your education. Most of our so-called educated youth cannot even fill a common passport form or a company registration form. I am not surprised that Ghana has been ranked lowest in the just released global educational index. Wait for my piece on that. What we receive in our schools which we call education is pathetic. I learn more outside the classroom than inside the classroom. Most of our youth only learn for exams. And you cannot be highly educated if your goal is to just pass an exams. So, all in all, we still have a long way to go. We need radical transformation and disruption of the status quo! From top to bottom!
Maazi Okoro: Thank you boss!

NB: Mahmoud Jajah is the Founder and the Executive Director of Initiative for Youth Development (IYD), an NGO that works with youth from deprived and marginalized communities in Ghana, the Founder & CEO of Amanah Energy Limited, a renewable energy start-up in Ghana, and currently working at the Ghana Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Born in Tema and raised in Maamobi (all in Accra), Mahmoud obtained his Bachelor of Science degree in Management Studies from the Central University in Accra, and recently completed a Master of Science degree program in International Oil and Gas Management at the Centre for Energy, Petroleum and Mineral Law and Policy (CEPLMP) at the University of Dundee, Scotland United Kingdom.
Mahmoud Jajah is the Founder and Co-Founder of at least five active youth groups including the AVERT Youth Foundation and Fortune Investment Club. In 2005, the British Council in Accra selected him as one of only two (the other being a female) young participants who represented Ghana at the Pan-African Youth Conference in Cape Town, South Africa. And in 2007, whilst at the university pursuing his first degree, he co-founded and became the publisher and editor of a student newspaper called “The Student Observer.”
In 2009, Mahmoud Jajah entered and won the first place prize, under the Entrepreneurship & Employment category of an international youth essay competition organized by the United States based Think Tank, the Centre for International Private Enterprise (CIPE).
Mahmoud Jajah is married to a very beautiful & intelligent lady called Maimuna Alhassan Dkeny. He likes reading, swimming, traveling and watching football.


Inusah Mohammed
The interviewer is a National Service Person with the Graphic Communications Group Limited.


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