A Pan-African vision for 2050

Africa Remembered Who She Was

Handmade, culture-keeping dolls — sewn by grandmothers in Maker Circles, guided by Councils of Elders. A living atlas of African memory, so a billion children can remember who they are.

Most toys a child holds carry someone else's story. We believe it's time Africa's own came home.

Our idea

The stories we hand our children

For generations, the toys and heroes placed in African children's hands have carried someone else's image of the world — a quiet inheritance of colonisation, and of the markets that followed it. What a child is given to love shapes who they believe they can become.

Africa's own wisdom was never lost — its queens and scholars, its councils of elders, its crafts and living proverbs were only set aside. We sew handmade dolls that carry these stories back into a child's arms: not relics behind glass, but companions to learn from and grow up proud of — so a billion children can remember who they are.

And the elders who still hold these stories are with us today. There is still time to gather their wisdom and carry it into the present and the future — to begin healing the wound the past left behind. But that time is now.

The Living Map

Where they come from

Sixty dolls, rooted in the lands and legacies that shaped them. Tap a doll to enter their story.

By value
By subject
By year livedAny year

Browse by region & country

Why this exists

Memory is the cure

Colonisation took many things; the deepest was memory — of who Africa was, and who its children could be. The cure is to remember. This vision rests on three levers.

01

The children

A billion African and diaspora children, learning their own heroes the way others learn theirs.

02

The dolls

Objects of love a child holds — each carrying a true story, a culture, an honest history.

03

The grandmothers

Keepers of the craft and the stories, sewing in Maker Circles and earning a fair share.

The road to 2050

How memory scales

1

Maker Circles

Grandmothers sew the dolls by hand, paid 42% of each sale — heritage as livelihood.

2

Schools (Shule)

Each doll ships with a curriculum: real history, sources, honest difficulty — for classrooms across the continent.

3

Council of Elders

A binding veto over every product touching their heritage. Appreciation, never appropriation.

4

2050

A generation that grew up remembering — strong enough to give, from its own roots outward.

The Film

Africa 2050 — She Remembered

A six-minute journey through the wound, the cure, and the dolls that carry the memory forward.

Built to be trusted

Whose project this is

The structure is the promise. These are written into the founding documents, not left to goodwill.

  • 42% of every sale goes to the grandmother who sewed the doll.
  • 51% African ownership, locked in the founding documents.
  • Pay-what-you-can pricing (≈ €40–120), so no child is priced out.
  • A Council of Elders holds a binding veto over every product touching their heritage.