The Director of Gi-IT and Business Makerere on the 6th Graduation held on 26th July 2024 at Patidar Samaj on Buganda Road Kampala
On 26th July 2024, during the 6th Graduation Ceremony of the Global Institute of Information Technology and Business at Patidar Samaj, Kampala, Director Ben Opolot delivered an inspiring speech. He congratulated graduates on their achievement, emphasized the value of vocational and technical skills in today’s job market, and encouraged them to embrace entrepreneurship, innovation, and lifelong learning as they step into the future.
Good morning!
Esteemed guests, respected faculty, devoted parents, cherished families, beloved friends—and above all, the graduating class of today: all protocol observed.
What a day this is. What a moment.
Today is far more than a ceremony. It is the sunrise after countless long nights. It is the victory lap after years of hard work, sleepless study sessions, the anxiety of deadlines, tuition struggles, early mornings, and chaotic traffic—all leading here, to this radiant moment of accomplishment.
Today, we honour your grit. Your determination. Your relentless pursuit of a dream. What you have done is no small feat—it is a monumental achievement, a milestone that will echo through your personal and professional history.
And now, as you stand at the edge of a new beginning, the dreams that once seemed distant, the hopes that once felt fragile, are no longer out of reach. They are real, tangible, within grasp. The future—a blank page pregnant with possibility—awaits your signature.
What a triumph. What a day. What a future awaits you.
Congratulations!
But allow me to pose a question—perhaps the most important question of all:
What do you want to be? Or better still, what do you want to do with this achievement?
Before you answer that, let me share a glimpse of my own journey—because standing here reminds me of the day I, too, graduated. And unlike many of you who are completing professional, practical, and in-demand qualifications, I graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Literature in English.
Yes… a "flat degree," as it was mockingly called. A qualification people said led nowhere, good for nothing—destined for poverty, disease, and obscurity.
A close family member even urged me to repeat my A-levels, just to avoid "wasting" my future on such a degree. My real dream was to study journalism at Makerere. But life in early 1990s Teso had other plans. The weight of conflict and circumstance meant I missed the application deadline. I had to settle for what the world called a mistake—a flat degree.
But deep down, I refused to believe that a piece of paper could define my worth.
Despite the labels, despite the mockery, despite being told I could never be more than "a flat degree holder"—I held on to the belief that I could rise. That I could turn my stumbling block into a stepping stone.
The stigma didn’t end with my family. Even at university, there was a hierarchy of dreams—lawyers, engineers, doctors… and then us. The forgotten faculty. The condemned dreamers.
We were told we wouldn’t find jobs. That we wouldn’t even find love! “Who would marry a flat degree holder?” they’d ask with cruel laughter.
But I chose not to listen. I chose to build.
I pursued one course, one skill, one paper at a time. I read, I worked, I grew. I joined Uganda’s leading media house, Vision Group. I travelled the world. I earned a master’s degree in Journalism and Media Studies from Rhodes University—one of the most prestigious programs in the world.
What I missed at the bachelor’s level, I conquered at the master’s level.
And yes, the “flat degree holder” did marry a campus girl—from Gayaza and Nabisunsa, no less! Today, she stands with me, side by side, as co-director of Global Institute Makerere—a place committed to equipping young minds like yours with the tools to transform the world.
So you see… there are many ways to cook your chicken. Just be clear about the flavour you want.
I refused to be defined by cynics. I listened instead to the quiet but unwavering voice inside me—the voice of purpose.
And so I return to the question I asked you:
What do you want to be? Or better still, what do you want to do?
My answer?
Anything.
Yes—anything. Anything that uplifts your soul, your family, your community, your country, and the world.
Because your journey isn’t about titles or degrees. It’s about impact. It’s about service. It’s about legacy.
There will be obstacles. Plenty of them. Just as some still wrongly stigmatize vocational education today, just as I was once dismissed for my course of study, the world will try to fit you into its small boxes.
But don’t let it.
Refuse to shrink. Refuse to settle.
Keep dreaming.
Keep learning.
Keep hoping.
Keep building.
Keep walking.
And whatever you do—never stop believing in yourself.
Let your steps be guided not by fear, but by that ever-present whisper of greatness deep in your heart.
Because the true measure of your achievement today is not the certificate in your hand—but what you choose to do with it. Use it in service of others. Use it to uplift. Use it to inspire. That is true education.
That is what Global Institute stands for. That is what your graduation stands for.
So go out and shape the future. Go out and be the future.
Thank you. Thank you. And once again—Congratulations!