This has provided an opportunity to transfer knowledge- from young BME (Black Minority Ethnic) people from her community to large organisations. She has spoken to a wide range of audiences from Schools and Youth Clubs to National Conferences. These have been further shared and viewed on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Twitter and What’s App (10s of 1000s) of time. Kwesia’s YouTube films have had over 28,000 views. The innovative approach of having young people from urban environments, walking in their streets and neighbours, having conversation on nature and the power of healing, and developing these into memeable shorts and films has begun to change the narratives on who nature and outdoors is available, and that young black people like her have an equal access to seek wonder and joy in these spaces. She started to share these explorations through social media channels and visited youth clubs, schools, and parks, giving talks on her lived experience and ways to access nature and the outdoors, and its benefit to health and well-being. She met with other explorers doing similar things and to build new networks and connections – from beekeepers & polar explorers to urban birders, from forest hikers to neighbourhood gardeners, and developed her social media presence joining like-minded people together. She started to integrate art, and style, and fashion, into her films to make her films resonant and connective. The diverse and multicultural people that she engaged with all looked like her, dressed like her, and many were having these conversations for the very first time. ![]() This led to her creating her YouTube Channel, where she met with different people from all walks of life and engaged them in conversations in and around their own local spaces. She bought together a team of black film makers and creatives and asked them to follow her explorations of spaces and places that she found healing, and invited some of her friends to join her. She started upskilling herself on nature all around her and went on self-discovery and walks and visits in her community spaces. She knew that she had to make nature ‘cool’ again. That nature is within us, and on our doorsteps and streets. She also understood that nature is not an abstract term or something that is remote from our day to day lives. She understood the power of social media in young people’s lives and the attraction to signifiers of respectability amongst her peers. Kwesia understood that she needed to build bridges between the community that she cares about and the environments that can heal them. Many experience adverse childhood episodes that lead to lifelong debilitating traumas. They are often trapped in cycles of poverty and discrimination, with little understanding and access to spaces beyond their immediate homes and challenges. Because of many complex reasons, young people from black and ethnic minority communities do not have access to nature and the outdoors. On her return, she committed to providing similar opportunities and healing for those who come from a similar background to her. She was also amongst complete strangers, with whom she developed bonds of trusted friendships, having to work together and cooperate to reach shared objectives. She began to breathe more deeply, her horizons more widely expanded. This had a healing impact on her, situating herself within a greater universal whole. She experienced for the first time, through direct and immediate encounter, life on earth teaming with energy and potential. ![]() The opportunity to travel to the Amazon came at a particularly low point, and in many ways changed her trajectory. Growing up in a deprived and inner-city area of London, England, she has faced several challenges which had a traumatic impact on her life.From being a young career to her Grandmother who had longterm health conditions, losing her Aunty murdered by her Uncle which is described as ‘Honor Killing’ to losing friends to Knife Crime & homelessness. ![]() Kwesia started ‘City Girl in Nature’ after a profound experience with nature on a British Exploring Society expedition to the Peruvian Amazon. The money raised here will go towards helping facilitate and organise nature walks, camps/trips around nature connection, help facilities workshops/talks in schools, create more online content around how inner city people can connect with the natural world enabling access & engaging the community.
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