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Jul 29, 2021 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
This week at the Olympics, there’s a runner you’ve never heard of.

She’s from a place you haven’t been, and most people never will.

And yet – It’s the most heartwarming story you’ll read.

A thread 🧵
This is Rose Nathike Lokonyen.

She grew up in South Sudan.

When she was just 8, militants stormed into her village and killed her neighbors.

She ran barefoot, all night in the dark, just to make it to safety.

(📸 UNHCR/Bobby Pall) Image
People in the neighboring village gave her family shelter, but only until they could make it to Kenya.

Again, they walked day and night to safety.

This was their new home.

The Kakuma Refugee Camp, one of the biggest in the world.

(📸UNHCR/Siegfried Modola) Image
The camp was designed for 55,000 people.

Instead, it has 200,000.

Rose was lucky to get a spot in primary school. But then, life changed again.

Her parents went back to South Sudan to look for her grandparents.

As a child, Rose was now the head of the family.

(📸/UNHCR) Image
Between raising her siblings and going to school, her teacher asked her to participate in a 10-km race.

She didn’t have any shoes, so she ran it all barefoot.

She came in second.

(📸UNHCR/Hector Perez + Anthony Karumba) Image
Later that year, she was invited to the national trials, where she finished first.

They told her she’d be going to Rio to compete in the Olympics.

She had no idea where Rio was.

She thought it was somewhere in Kenya.

(📸UNHCR/Benjamin Loyseau) ImageImage
In Rio, she was one of ten refugees to represent first ever all-Refugee Team.

With just a year of training, she finished seventh in her 800-metre trial.

Against the best athletes in the world.

She finished seventh.

(📸UNHCR/Benjamin Loyseau) Image
When she came back home, she landed a spot at Kenya's top training camp for runners.

Then last year, Covid hit.

Everything closed.

She went back to the refugee camp, where she still ran once a day in 40-degree Celsius heat.

(📸UNHCR/Anthony Karumba) Image
This week, Rose is back at the Olympics.

She’s running the 800-metres again.

When they announce her name, hardly anyone will know her story.

Now, you do.

Sports is awesome.

(📸UNHCR/Antsushi Shibuya) Image
Update:

After the Olympics, Rose will have a new home.

Canada has admitted her under a new pilot program that provides athletic scholarships to refugees.

She'll have a place to live, and tuition to go to school.

Dreams do come true.

🇨🇦

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More from @Goodable

Jan 31
This is a thread about how the news shows you the worst of humanity, while intentionally ignoring the best.

And it has to do with Jackie Robinson.

🧵
Jackie Robinson was born 105 years ago today. At the age of 28, he broke baseball’s color barrier — and changed the game forever.

But last week, something horrible happened. Image
In Wichita, Kansas, security cameras captured thieves stealing a statue of Robinson. They cut it at the ankles, hauled it away, then set it on fire.

All they left were the feet.
Image
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Read 18 tweets
Dec 26, 2023
When you watch the news, it's easy to believe everything is getting worse.

It's not.

Since it’s that time of year, here are 39 good news stories that you didn’t hear about in 2023.

Let’s go 🧵Image
1. More girls are getting an education

This year, UNICEF reported there are 50 million more girls in school compared to just ten years ago. Girls are also graduating at higher levels, with 89% completing primary school and 61% completing high school.

Education for the win!Image
2. More Oceans are Being Protected

This year, countries committed more than $20 billion in funding towards ocean conservation. And over a million square kilometers of ocean was formally protected off the coasts of Kenya, Ireland, Australia, Panama, Chile, and Papua New Guinea.Image
Read 9 tweets
Sep 11, 2023
On this day, a tiny town in Canada opened up their hearts — and their homes — to 7,000 stranded passengers in their time of need.

They didn’t care about politics, or who the President was.

They did it because it's what Canadians do. Here's how they did it.

A Goodable Thread🧵 Image
On the Eastern coast of North America, there's a Canadian province called Newfoundland.

It’s filled with cold winters, warm summers, and even warmer hearts.

In this province is a town called Gander.

In the 1940s, its airport used to be one of the biggest in the world. Image
The morning of September 11, 2001 started out like any other day.

People dropped off their kids to school, went to work, chatted with friends. The kind of things that happen everyday in small towns across Canada.

Then, in an instant, everything changed.

💔
Read 16 tweets
Aug 25, 2023
Without further adieu, we present cute pets reading this week's best Goodable headlines.

A Thread.

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She likes how this Top Chef star is helping victims of the wildfires in Maui. Image
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Read 9 tweets
Aug 8, 2023
Everyone knows that people trust the news less and less these days.

The question is why?

Reuters just surveyed thousands of people across six continents.

The results are disturbing.

A Goodable Thread🧵 Image
If you’ve stopped trusting the news, you’re not alone.

In nearly every country, trust in news has been plummeting. Only 40% of all people say they overall trust the news. In America, it’s just 32%.

Think about what that means for democracy.

And it gets worse. Image
Look at this.

People have actively stopped consuming news in record numbers. Nearly 36% of people say they actively avoid the news.

It means they actively go out of their way to avoid it when it’s on.

These are at historic levels.

And there's more. Image
Read 6 tweets
Jul 25, 2023
Everyone knows that the media is built on negativity. Without it, they wouldn’t exist.

We’ve been saying for years that their negativity is actually killing us. To prove it, we did a small experiment.

The results were disturbing.

A Goodable Thread 🧵
We wanted to see just how addicted the world’s top news sites are to negativity, so we ran an audit. We focused on only the biggest news sites, which included:

Apple
Google
Yahoo
ABC
CNN

Together, they have over a billion visitors per day.

Here’s what we found 👇🏼
Of the top 30 news stories on Apple, only two were about positive things in the world.

Just two.

Their top headlines were about flooding and Ukraine. It got so depressing we had to stop.

How did the other sites compare? Let's see. Image
Read 12 tweets

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