Tutu\'s Children/Al Jazeera
Before leaving for London, Nigerian managing director Amy Jadesimi reflects
on her emotional meeting with Archbishop Desmond Tutu (episode 2) and goes back to the
Oxford Debating Union where she first met him, to revisit the moment she first felt
a sense of pride as a black woman.
Tutu\'s Children/Al Jazeera
The young leaders arrive in London for the final three days of
their coaching, completely in the dark about a mystery task awaiting them.
Tutu\'s Children/Al Jazeera
They discover it’s a cookery task, and they must barter with
each other to get the right ingredients to make an ‘authentic’ African meal.
Tutu\'s Children/Al Jazeera
The kitchen erupts in chaos as the leaders realise they
do not have the essentials: salt, tomatoes and perhaps the most precious of
resources - oil.
Tutu\'s Children/Al Jazeera
So, when some are given the ingredients in secret, will they squander
or share the resources they know the others also need?
Tutu\'s Children/Al Jazeera
An exclusive, no-cameras tour of the House of Lords prompts
some intriguing insights about the British aristocracy. But do Tutu’s Children
see themselves as an elite?
Tutu\'s Children/Al Jazeera
Six months, 41 sessions and several emotional crises later,
the 25 young leaders finally graduate as the Archbishop Desmond Tutu Fellows of
2012.