Uzi bamwe mu bajene ikintu turi kuzira se?? Urahura na Minister yagukora mu ntoki, noneho watunga numero ye ariwe uyikwihereye ugahita wumva wahindutse State Minister cg PS.
EGO.
I am excited to be representing Rwanda π·πΌ at the 2026 Global Farmer Network Roundtable and Communication Training in SΓ£o Paulo, Brazil π§π·
There is something powerful about seeing your countryβs name on the table in a room filled with farmers and agricultural leaders from across the world. It reminds you that agriculture connects us far beyond borders.
This week conversations on farmer advocacy, trade, innovation, and communication reminded me that agriculture is not only shaped in fields, but also in the ideas and voices that influence the future of food systems.
Being part of these exchanges has been both humbling and inspiring.
As someone whose journey began through hands-on work with farmers in Rwanda, and now continues through research in agricultural technology at the University of NebraskaβLincoln, moments like this feel deeply meaningful.
They connect local experience with global dialogue.
I have especially appreciated learning how farmer voices can help shape conversations around food security, sustainability, and emerging technologies.
Those discussions resonate with my work in human-centered AI in agriculture and my commitment to ensuring innovation works for farmers in practical and inclusive ways.
Representing Rwanda here also makes me reflect on how much our country has to contribute to global conversations on agriculture, youth leadership, and innovation. I carry that with pride.
Through Agirite , social media engagement, and research, I have always believed agriculture is not only about production.
It is also about opportunity, storytelling, and transformation. Being in this space reinforces that belief.
And there is something special about doing this in Brazil π§π· , a country whose agricultural story continues to shape global food systems. There is much to learn here.
I am grateful to Global Farmer Network for creating spaces where farmers, researchers, and leaders can learn from one another and think together about the future.
From Rwanda to Brazil, this experience is a reminder that when farmers share ideas across continents, innovation grows.
Honored to represent my motherland in this room. π·πΌπ§π·π
Michael Carrick was a class act as a player and he can become a great coach as well. Nothing is impossible for this guy. Personally, Iβm proud to have played with him by my side as well as with him as a manager on our bench. ππ½ππ½
A boy from a village in western Rwanda π·πΌ could not have imagined this.
I studied Physics, Chemistry and Biology in high school, earned admission to study medicine, and thought that was the path I would follow.
But something kept pulling me back to where I came from.
To farmers.β¨To agriculture.β¨To purpose.
In 2019, I made a choice many did not expect.
I turned down medicine and chose agriculture.
That decision changed my life.
From co-founding Agirite in 2021β¦β¨to working with farmers, youth, and global organizations.
From rural Rwandaβ¦β¨to traveling across 10+ countries since 2022.
And now, reflecting at the University of Nebraska πΊπΈ on research, innovation, and the future of agriculture.
Funny enough, I once tried to run away from agriculture.
Now it keeps taking me places.
Life has a sense of humor.
Sometimes the path you resist becomes the one that carries you furthest.
Still learning.β¨Still building.β¨Still becoming.