 Here in Choslovo, a lot of people here have talents which are not recognized. As Nelson Mandela said, we are free and we are quite free. But I wouldn't say that we are free because living in a slum is not quite free. No, we're not free. I take education as a key. I want to work hard for my future so that I can become something big. These learners who were born just before 94 or they were born just after. So they have not grown up under the laws of apartheid. But they still feel the effects of it. Because current is directly proportional to power, I would like it. Sometimes we don't have enough resources like books to study, to go to the library, it's a one-hour walk. So you can get there at 5 o'clock, they're already closing. The only reading material that these learners have is their textbooks. In homes here you won't find reading material. So then how do learners access information? I would like you all to look on Wikipedia. One of the interesting things you can search for is click land widget. At first, I personally didn't know anything about Wikipedia. It was like finding this great solution that's always been there, but we just didn't know that it was. Wikipedia is like a teacher to me. You search for it, but you'll be getting more than what you expected. This is geography. When I revise, I write some of the stuff on the wall so that I don't forget them. Every day when I wake up I can see them. As much as it's hard for us to access information here, it's quite amazing. We all have cell phones. Everyone could get the information they need. But now that we need airtime to access Wikipedia, it's like if you don't have money, you don't have information. If you have money, you have the information. Sometimes you need to take the money you have for your lunch and then you must buy airtime. In my school, we decided to write up an open letter to our local cell phone providers. We asked them to offer their customers free access to Wikipedia on their cell phones. With Wikipedia, you have some backup. You have somewhere where you can read about the things you need to know. The cell phone today has penetrated the very bottom on the socio-economic ladder. Six billion people have cell phones. If people understand that cell phones are ubiquitous and Wikipedia is free, and all you have to do is to connect those two things together, then you have free access to information right there. In the pockets, every day, all the time, it's a game changer. There's a lot of talent in just love and real talent. Sometimes you see the rubbish and you think it's useless. But once you dig deep in that rubbish, you might find gold. I'm Lukanya. I came here to study at the University of England. I have never valued education as I value it right now where I'm at. Once you do doctoral science, you notice that it's not about what you have, but it's about how you use what you have and how it comes from being educated. And so that will give you a lot of resources, but a population is not really educated. So we don't know how to use our resources effectively. I want to go into politics because I want to change places like just love and to bring on places like where I'm at right now in this university. I don't think I would have gotten where I am right now without the help of Wikipedia. I don't. Once you're educated, you can think rationally. And if you have a heart and you're educated, there's nothing that's impossible to you. I want to become a medical practitioner because I want to give back to the society. I want to change people's lives. Wikipedia, I can say, it helps a lot because I learned there and I found my career there in electrical engineering. That's my future career now. There are very few female geologists and I want to change that and show that we are also capable of something best in life. And then this other day, Pete told us, guys, do you know that you could write up your own articles on Wikipedia? We were like, really? Our class went out together to take pictures of Joe Slavo. And then we could take them and we can put them on Wikipedia. I myself am proud. I just want the world to see the places that we are coming from. There was so much that was not there on Wikipedia that we could add, especially in the course of Wikipedia, Wikipedia in our own language. I'm trying to write an article about Omocha. It's going to be a new article. I'm going to try to name more females in my den. There's something wrong. It's supposed to be Dalibor. Wikipedia, it's like a portal to share our own ideas, share our own information. It's amazingly empowering, I think, for them to be part of that whole movement, because it's like a movement. It's like a revolution. Wikipedia is a solution that's making our dreams a possibility. We felt that there's a need for free access to Wikipedia so that everyone can be able to gain knowledge. It's not about us or about me anymore now. It's about other children who need all of the information that's available on Wikipedia for free. Six billion people have access to cell phones. Wikipedia is free, but data charges stop billions of people from even using it. Please sign our petition and encourage cellular carriers to provide free access to Wikipedia on cell phones.