Meghan, Duchess Of Sussex, On Women In Leadership, Her Nigerian Roots

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Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, speaks at an event in Abuja, Nigeria, May 11, 2024.

Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex (L), walks alongside Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (R), Director-General of the World Trade Organisation, during the event in Abuja, Nigeria,May 11, 2024.

Meghan Markle gestures as she and Prince Harry visit children at the Lights Academy in Abuja, Nigeria, May 10, 2024.

As Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex, Saturday met with women in Nigeria, she disclosed it has been “humbling” to discover through a genealogy test that she is partly Nigerian.

On her second day in Nigeria, where she is visiting for the first time with Prince Harry to also promote mental health for wounded soldiers and young girls, Meghan acknowledged Nigeria as “my country”.

Said she at the event on women in leadership co-hosted by Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, economist and head of the World Trade Organisation (WTO): “It’s been eye-opening to be able to know more about my heritage.

“Never in a million years would I understand it as much as I do now. And what has been echoed so much in the past day is, ’Oh, we are not so surprised when we found out you are Nigerian’.

“It is a compliment to you because what they define as a Nigerian woman is brave, resilience, courageous, beautiful”.

The Duchess of Sussex had announced on her podcast in October 2022 that she found out through the DNA-based test that she was “43% Nigerian”.

Her first reaction after finding out was to tell her mother, she said at the event in Abuja.

Noted Meghan: “Being African-American, part of it is really not knowing so much about your lineage and background … and it was exciting for both of us”.

Mo Abudu, the anchor and chief executive of EbonyLife media group, then asked the audience to suggest a Nigerian name for Meghan.

Someone shouted from the excited crowd, “Ifeoma”, a name from Nigeria’s Igbo tribe which means ‘a treasured thing’. “Omowale” another suggested, from the Yoruba tribe, which means ‘our child has come home’.

Meghan joined female industry leaders such as Okonjo-Iweala to discuss the importance of mentorship for young women and the career challenges women face in a country like Nigeria, where it is not common for women to be in top leadership and political positions.

Asked by the anchor about how she felt about becoming the first woman and first African to lead the WTO, Okonjo-Iweala said it was long overdue.

Stated Okonjo-Iweala: “When I will feel right is when we stop saying, ‘the first woman to do this … to do that’. I have very mixed feelings about being the first woman because I think women should have been there already”.

She also spoke about mentors who had helped her career, including as Nigeria’s former finance minister.

Said Meghan, citing the case of Okonjo-Iweala as an example: “One way to mentor young girls is by ‘returning home’ to be closer to them. You need to come back home, you need to, at least, be a familiar face for the next generation to say, ‘Oh she looks like me and I can be that’”.

Earlier in the day, Meghan watched as Harry and his Invictus Games team lost to the Nigerian military’s team in a sitting volleyball game. It featured soldiers recovering from injuries sustained in Nigera’s fight against Islamic extremists and other armed gangs in the country’s conflict-battered north.

After the match held at the Nigerian Armed Forces’ Mess in Abuja, Harry and Meghan were surrounded by players, their families and a group of women who gifted Meghan a Nigerian fabric.

Said Peace Adetoro, 57, a member of the group: “We are friends and family supporters of Harry and Meghan. They are a beautiful couple, and we love them so much. We support them 100%”.

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