
By Mulengera Reporters
When Christabel Babirye Nabukenya stood before a room full of students and leaders at Africa Bible University in Lubowa in May 2026, she wasn’t just sharing her success story. She was reflecting on a journey that began with a bold question she asked a bank at the age of 12.
Today, Christabel Nabukenya is a student leader and a member of the Equity Leaders Program (ELP) Cohort 5. But years before joining the prestigious program, she was a young girl concerned about a challenge facing many people in rural Uganda: the long distances they travelled to access basic banking services.
In 2018, while participating in the Digital Impact Awards Africa, Christabel challenged Equity Bank Uganda to extend its EquiDuuka banking services deeper into rural communities. Her appeal was simple — financial services should be accessible to everyone, regardless of where they live.
What happened next left a lasting impression on her.
Over the years, she watched as EquiDuuka expanded across rural Uganda, bringing banking services closer to underserved communities. For Nabukenya, it was more than a business decision. It was evidence that a major institution could listen to ordinary citizens and act on their concerns.
“That moment made me realize that institutions can truly listen and act,” she recalls.
What began as a young girl’s observation would eventually evolve into a much deeper relationship with the bank.
Nabukenya later joined the Equity Leaders Program, one of the flagship initiatives of the Equity Group Foundation that nurtures academically gifted students through leadership development, mentorship, internships, and career guidance.
A former student of Gayaza High School, she admits that her understanding of banking was once shaped by the pressures of managing student savings activities at school. To her, banking appeared complicated, stressful, and largely transactional.
The Equity Leaders Program changed that perception.
Through mentorship sessions, leadership training, and interactions with industry professionals, Nabukenya discovered banking’s broader role in transforming lives and creating opportunities. She came to see it as a tool that empowers individuals, businesses, and communities to grow.
During the induction program, scholars participated in intensive sessions focused on leadership, discipline, resilience, integrity, and purpose. They were challenged to think beyond personal achievement and embrace their potential as future change-makers.
For Nabukenya and many of her peers, the experience was transformative.
“The program has helped many of us believe in ourselves and see leadership as service,” she says.
She credits Equity Bank Uganda and the Equity Group Foundation for investing in young people at a critical stage in their lives, helping them discover their purpose while equipping them with practical skills that extend far beyond the classroom.
Beyond academic support, the program provides mentorship, internships, personal development opportunities, and exposure that many young Ugandans might otherwise struggle to access. According to Nabukenya, these experiences are helping nurture a generation of confident, ethical, and solutions-oriented leaders ready to contribute to Uganda’s development.
She encourages fellow scholars to make the most of the opportunities available through the program and to return to their communities equipped with fresh ideas, stronger leadership skills, and a commitment to service.
Nabukenya’s story is one example of how Equity Bank Uganda’s investment in education is creating impact beyond scholarships and financial support.
Through initiatives such as the Equity Leaders Program, the bank is helping shape future leaders by combining education, mentorship, leadership development, and practical exposure. As Uganda’s youthful population continues to grow, such investments are becoming increasingly significant.
For Christabel Nabukenya, the lesson is clear: when institutions invest in young people and listen to their voices, they do more than support education—they help shape the future. (For comments on this story, get back to us on 0705579994 [WhatsApp line], 0779411734 & 041 4674611 or email us at mulengeranews@gmail.com).


























