Image 2 of 12
Kibera Olympic
110816_Kelly_©BobMiller_337.jpg
NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 16, 2011: Kamau "Kelly" Ng'ang'a walks home through the winding dirt paths of Kibera slum.
Within Kenya's progressive youth culture is the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club, a group of low-income adolescents from the slum whose leader uses boxing as a way to engage with idle youth. The group's ethnic diversity is remarkable given Kenya's 2008 post-election violence in which people from several tribes were forced violently out of slums. Together, these boxers represent a nascent trend of cross-tribe brotherhood in a healing nation.
Within Kenya's progressive youth culture is the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club, a group of low-income adolescents from the slum whose leader uses boxing as a way to engage with idle youth. The group's ethnic diversity is remarkable given Kenya's 2008 post-election violence in which people from several tribes were forced violently out of slums. Together, these boxers represent a nascent trend of cross-tribe brotherhood in a healing nation.
![NAIROBI, KENYA - AUGUST 16, 2011: Kamau "Kelly" Ng'ang'a walks home through the winding dirt paths of Kibera slum.<br />
<br />
Within Kenya's progressive youth culture is the Kibera Olympic Boxing Club, a group of low-income adolescents from the slum whose leader uses boxing as a way to engage with idle youth. The group's ethnic diversity is remarkable given Kenya's 2008 post-election violence in which people from several tribes were forced violently out of slums. Together, these boxers represent a nascent trend of cross-tribe brotherhood in a healing nation.](https://archive.bobmiller.works/img-get2/I0000ri1Afb1zmlI/fit=1000x750/g=G0000ZrSegBukuZc/110816-Kelly-BobMiller-337.jpg)
![](/img/pixel.gif)