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Steel meets serenity: Kwame Bekoe talks to Race in STEM

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Manage episode 452216716 series 3608480
Content provided by Race in STEM. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Race in STEM or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

For our latest Race in STEM podcast, our global community manager, Steven Fuller, caught up with aviation and sustainability expert Kwame Bekoe.

Born and raised in the UK of Ghanaian parents, Kwame went back to Ghana for three years of secondary school, gaining a deeper understanding of his culture and background, before returning to the UK and finishing his education. It was far from plain sailing in the part of southwest London where he spent the first part of his childhood. “The town I was actually born in was a stronghold for the British National Party, so I remember actually in my youth seeing these marches happening all around me, all these people filled with anger and hatred.”

It was Kwame’s parents, and his father in particular, who helped him come to terms with experiences like these. “He would explain to me about really what is going on, why people think like this and you know, a lot of it is down to indifference and lack of understanding – and really just how to navigate my way through that and not let it become a deterrent or a hindrance as to where it is I feel I want to go in life.”

Kwame combines this measured approach for all life throws at him with a strong resolve and willpower – something his father also had no small part in instilling. “He is someone who’s really filled with grit, with determination. I think someone of his generation to be able to move from Africa, to move from Ghana, pretty much the first I would say in my direct and indirect family, with the passion to just study and learn and really just to go for that dream and to do something different.”

Kwame’s certainly doing something different with his current role as commercial director at Zero, a company revolutionising the way aircraft are powered and reducing their environmental impact. Listen to the complete conversation as Kwame talks family responsibilities, having a dream your teachers don’t believe in and ensuring better representation within the STEM space.

Part of The IN Group Communities, Race in STEM a safe, judgement-free space to share one another’s experiences and ideas. Together, we can challenge the status quo and showcase the excellence of the underrepresented in STEM.
Keep in touch and find out more about RACE in STEM!

  continue reading

41 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 452216716 series 3608480
Content provided by Race in STEM. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Race in STEM or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

For our latest Race in STEM podcast, our global community manager, Steven Fuller, caught up with aviation and sustainability expert Kwame Bekoe.

Born and raised in the UK of Ghanaian parents, Kwame went back to Ghana for three years of secondary school, gaining a deeper understanding of his culture and background, before returning to the UK and finishing his education. It was far from plain sailing in the part of southwest London where he spent the first part of his childhood. “The town I was actually born in was a stronghold for the British National Party, so I remember actually in my youth seeing these marches happening all around me, all these people filled with anger and hatred.”

It was Kwame’s parents, and his father in particular, who helped him come to terms with experiences like these. “He would explain to me about really what is going on, why people think like this and you know, a lot of it is down to indifference and lack of understanding – and really just how to navigate my way through that and not let it become a deterrent or a hindrance as to where it is I feel I want to go in life.”

Kwame combines this measured approach for all life throws at him with a strong resolve and willpower – something his father also had no small part in instilling. “He is someone who’s really filled with grit, with determination. I think someone of his generation to be able to move from Africa, to move from Ghana, pretty much the first I would say in my direct and indirect family, with the passion to just study and learn and really just to go for that dream and to do something different.”

Kwame’s certainly doing something different with his current role as commercial director at Zero, a company revolutionising the way aircraft are powered and reducing their environmental impact. Listen to the complete conversation as Kwame talks family responsibilities, having a dream your teachers don’t believe in and ensuring better representation within the STEM space.

Part of The IN Group Communities, Race in STEM a safe, judgement-free space to share one another’s experiences and ideas. Together, we can challenge the status quo and showcase the excellence of the underrepresented in STEM.
Keep in touch and find out more about RACE in STEM!

  continue reading

41 episodes

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