Most of the work we do is emotionally draining and thankless. People come, you give everything, and they walk away. To be recognized by an institution that didn’t even know me personally was powerful.
New ambulances during the launch of the EdoEMS in Edo, Nigeria.
Through the award, Kate attended Coady’s Diploma in Development Leadership program, which was a turning point. The program not only validated her efforts but also introduced her to a global community of changemakers. The participatory learning model and diverse cohort helped her refine her methods and expand her impact.
“Coady’s framework gave me a vocabulary and structure for what I was already doing intuitively,” she says. “It helped me test my ideas against global standards and find new ways to grow.”
Since her time at Coady, Kate has gone on to complete a Women, Peace, and Security fellowship jointly offered by the African Leadership Centre in Nairobi and King’s College London. She credits her credibility and international opportunities in part to the visibility the Katherine Fleming Award gave her.
Through her work at Emergency Response Africa, she led the Edo Emergency Medical Services providing free ambulatory and onsite medical emergency services to residents of Benin City.
Her work is informed by a balanced life philosophy. Kate does not view patriarchy as something to be torn down with rage, but as a system to be challenged with clarity and fairness.
“I didn’t come into this space to fight men,” she says. “I came to affirm that women are human beings first; deserving of the same rights, respect, and space to thrive.”
She also remains vocal about the emotional toll such work carries, often unrecognized by outsiders. The financial and psychological demands are real, and yet the work persists, sustained by deep conviction.
Kate sees Coady Institute not just as a training ground but as a source of long-term solidarity.
“I’ve prayed that one day I’ll be able to fund someone else’s journey to Coady,” she says. “It was truly life changing.”
Her story is a reminder that grassroots change often begins in overlooked corners: prison cells, community shelters, homes shadowed by silence and with the right support, that change can ripple outward to touch policy, institutions, and generations to come.
The Katherine Fleming International Development Award is presented annually to an African woman leader in memory of Katherine Fleming a 1985 graduate of St. Francis Xavier University (1985), who dedicated her life’s work to overcoming child poverty in Africa until her death in 1999.
Since 2000, Coady Institute has presented the prestigious award to 25 different recipients during StFX Homecoming celebrations. In 2025, to mark the 25th anniversary of the award, Coady Institute offered the first Katherine Fleming Women’s Leadership Course in partnership with Organization for Women in Self Employment (WISE) Ethiopia in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The award and course were made possible through the generosity of donors. Learn more and donate by going to Katherine Fleming International Development Award