Rye Barcott (a student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) meets Tabitha Festo (a Kenyan nurse based in Kibera) and Salim Mohamed (a Kenyan community organizer) while researching ethnic violence among youth in Kibera.
CFK Africa is founded by Tabitha Festo, Salim Mohamed, and Rye Barcott as “Carolina for Kibera.”
CFK’s Girls’ Empowerment Program, named Binti Pamoja, is founded.
CFK’s first medical clinic opens.
CFK brings together male and female youth of different ethnicities to promote community cooperation and development through sports and establishes Kibera’s first all-girls’ soccer league.
CFK co-founder Tabitha Festo passes away after a short, abrupt illness.
CFK signs a memorandum of understanding with UNC-Chapel Hill, setting the course for our equitable research collaborations.
Time Magazine and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation name CFK Africa a Hero of Global Health.
ABC News names CFK co-founder Rye Barcott a Person of the Year.
CFK releases LightBox, a book comprised entirely of photos taken by teenage members of the Girls’ Empowerment Program and essays they have written about their lives.
CFK signs a memorandum of understanding with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), establishing one of the organization’s largest overseas population-based infectious diseases surveillance platforms.
The United Nations recognizes CFK’s Girls’ Empowerment Program as one of the world’s premier programs addressing the unique challenges and needs of adolescent girls.
CFK expands and relocates Tabitha Medical Clinic to serve more patients in Kibera.
The Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum honors CFK with the Reflections of Hope Award.
CFK launches its scholarship project.
CFK opens its new three-story Tabitha Medical Clinic.
CFK celebrates 10 years of service in Kibera.
CFK co-founder Rye Barcott's book, It Happened on the Way to War, is published.
CFK begins leading community health outreach, including home health visits and health education.
Without a Fight, an award-winning documentary featuring CFK’s Sports for Development project and exploring how soccer can facilitate social change in Kibera, makes its U.S. premiere.
Harvard Business School profiles CFK as the topic for its first multimedia case study.
CFK begins monitoring and treating malnourished children under-5.
CFK establishes the Information and Communications Technology Centre in partnership with Nairobits.
CFK opens the Lishe Bora Nutrition Centre.
CFK launches the Best Schools Initiative (BSI) to improve student retention and progress in informal schools through data-driven, cost-effective best practices.
CFK opens its three-story headquarters building in Kibera to house a permanent safe space for girls as well as office and meeting space.
CFK opens and begins operating the Tabitha Maternity Home and Youth Friendly Services Center.
CFK becomes the CDC’s lead implementing partner on water, sanitation, and hygiene (WaSH) in Kenya.
CFK leads COVID-19 sample collection and contact tracing efforts in partnership with the CDC and Kenya Medical Research Institute.
CFK purchases and begins operating an ambulance in Kibera.
CFK convenes an Advisory Council.
CFK celebrates its 20th anniversary.
CFK leads COVID-19 vaccine distribution at Tabitha Medical Clinic.
CFK signs a memorandum of understanding with Kenyatta University, making them our first official Kenyan university partner.
CFK changes its name from “Carolina for Kibera” to “CFK Africa” as a signal of its ambitious plans for growth to informal settlements outside of Kibera.
CFK launches a new strategic plan (2022-2026) to guide expansion of its services to additional informal settlements across eight counties in Kenya.
CFK refines its Theory of Change to include seven guiding principles, deepening commitment to local leadership.
CFK launches national soccer teams, Kibera Soccer Women FC and Kibera Soccer FC who prove the talent and resilience of informal settlement youth to the world.
CFK facilities are awarded Best Performing in Neonatal Care, Leadership, and Human Resource Management by Nairobi City County for the 2024 Health Service Delivery Awards.
CFK significantly scales its community youth soccer programs to include 16 informal settlements across 5 counties.