Joelle O'Reilly-Hyland is not as famous as Oprah Winfrey, but maybe she
should be. Like Oprah, she’s built schools for girls in developing countries.
But unlike Oprah, spent much more time building schools than on TV. Joelle O'Reilly-Hyland is also not as famous as Bill Gates, but like Bill
Gates, she built her own, hugely-successful company from the ground and has
given computers and education aid to children in all over the world. Like
Gates, she says education is the key to the future, but she’s better known for
charity work than for building software.
Just who is Joelle O'Reilly-Hyland? She is the founder and managing
partner of Ounavarra
Capital, LLC. Her firm manages
investment funds, funds which are considered “alternative” investments because
they have an altruistic bent that Wall Street’s money moguls ignore as they
collect ever-larger bonuses whether shareholders make money or not. But Joelle
O'Reilly-Hyland isn’t nearly as well known for her success at making money as
she is for giving it away and for supporting education programs around the world, especially for disadvantaged girls.
Girls are deprived of education in most developing countries. Girls in
these countries are considered extremely fortunate if they can even learn to
read, let alone stay in school past second or third grade. Usually, they are
forced into a life of domestic labor in societies where chauvinistic abuse
toward women and girls is usually ignored and frequently condoned. They grow up
as women caught in a continuous cycle of poverty that drags men down with them
and keeps whole nations stuck in squalor. The key to breaking the poverty cycle
is education, says O'Reilly-Hyland, especially those who’ve never had schooling.
As an active board member of Educating Girls Globally (EGG), Joelle
O'Reilly-Hyland has donated funds and supported girls’ education efforts around
the globe. In Rajasthan, the largest province in India, few girls ever went to
school until recently. They were often married by the time they were ten or
eleven and “kept” under supervision until being old enough to be sent off to
their husbands’ homes. EGG’s efforts have helped 500 schools in Rajasthan
enroll 99% if the girls in their respective district while improving academic
performance at those schools for both girls and
boys. Educating girls will double India’s global talent pool, and that can’t
possibly be bad for business.
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