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Preparing to Fulfill Our Promise

Our Mission

The EZWON Learning institute has purchased land and structure, and is in the process of finishing two buildings for the school.
Student programs will include learning a trade and technical education in computers, medical service per the regulations of the National Board for Technical Education, and a youth outreach program.

The Problem

Many underserved youths are roadside mechanics, commercial motorcyclists, welders, hawkers, street vendors, bar attendants, and truck conductors who learned their trades through apprenticeship. They neither have formal education nor meet up with the new trend in the technological world.

Outdated Resources

This is a significant setback to the entire community’s progress; the mechanics, for instance, are left with old mechanical techniques and outdated auto services, forcing the vehicle owners to search for professionals outside the local areas.

New parts have given way to reconstructed parts. The chances of owning a modern vehicle in Okigwe are declining because of the lack of professionals for repairing or serving work. 

Employment challenges

To better understand the situation, the Okigwe environment is like a home for unprofessional and a dumping ground for retired vehicles. This is the same experience with other professions like masons, tilers, farmers, welders, health care practitioners, etc.

Nigerian diasporas, who wanted to set up a project, are resolved to invite foreign professionals for their jobs, contributing to the increase of joblessness in the local areas. 

Infrastructure Hurdles

Sad to say that after the exit of colonial masters who built railways and roads connecting the North from the South, Okigwe became a forgotten zone both by the State and Federal Governments. There is no government influence in Okigwe, no electricity supply, good roads, and pipe-borne water.

Okigwe community strives to live above poverty, circumvented by little money flow.

Major Opportunities

There are many talented young men and women in Nigeria who longs for support and empowerment, which Ezwon institute is poised to bring with the help of the church and the community.

Okigwe is rich in mineral resources like crushed stone, gravel, and sand, thus the center of the trucking business in Imo State, Nigeria. It is at the heart of the defunct Eastern Region with significant link roads, equidistant to major cities like Owerri, Enugu, Umuahia, Aba, Nnewi, Orumba, and Orlu. Therefore, Okigwe is an excellent and befitting location for business.

Photography by Desola Lanre-Ologun

8
Professional Programs
4.9

Million Residents

Untapped Potential

Local Support

The emergence of EZWON Educational Institute, will not only create a platform for innovation, new opportunities, transformation of economies and improving human performance, it will remain in history as one of the greatest manifestations of hope for disadvantaged young people after the Nigerian Civil War. EZWON is a reassurance that theory and praxis can once again consistently and effectively collaborate in the service of education.

Prof. KANU, Ikechukwu Anthony, O.S.A.Professor of African Philosophy - Tansian University, Nigeria, President: Association for the Promotion of African Studies (APAS), Editor-In-Chief: IGWEBUIKE

Bravo to Ezwon Technical and Vocational Institute! As a resident of the Okigwe metropolis, I am sure that youths in Okigwe will forever be grateful to God for giving them a technical and Vocational institution being the first of its kind in Okigwe.Technical and Vocational institutions will equip the youths with skills that can broaden their opportunities in life, and provide them with the skills necessary for self-employment.

Mrs. Kanu Gladys Anurika - Head of Guidance and Counselling DepartmentFederal Government College, Okigwe Imo State Nigeria.

EZWON is also an institution for the search and research of/for the ways and means of translating and defining work systems made-possible and straightforward through the needed and expected local hands of a people for the further translation and ownership of the products they can call their own.

Rev. Fr. Prof. Jerome Ikechukwu OkonkwoDepartment of Philosophy, Imo State University-Owerri-Nigeria.