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Ezekiel Ndikumana

Ezekiel Ndikumana

Keeping Culture Alive: A Refugee’s Story of Survival, Strength & Hope through Music

Pastor and Burundian Refugee

Why you should listen to him:

Ezekiel Ndikumana works 10 to 12-hour shifts, six days a week at a San Antonio tomato produce company. On his way and to and from his job, Ezekiel — one the only automobile owners in his community — picks up and drops off nine friends at their respective employers.

For Ezekiel, the hard work and extra carpooling is hardly an inconvenience.

After living 34 years in the wretched conditions of a Tanzanian refugee camp — where Ezekiel’s wife gave birth to seven of the couple’s eight children — he feels “lucky” to live a productive life in Texas.

Faith and singing kept the Ndikumana family’s hope alive in the refugee camp, and three years ago, the United Nations — as part of its refugee relocation program — flew the family to America to live. Against the advice of other refugees and West Africans in San Antonio, Ezekiel started a Pentecostal church, where the family now expresses their Burundi culture through joyful music that attracts visitors from all over the state.

To contact Ezekiel, please email Michele Koch at MKoch@SpringCreekUMC.org

Watch His 2011 Presentation

Join the Conversation

Do you agree? Have additional comments? TED and TEDx gatherings are meant to start conversations, so please share your thoughts below. Also, be sure to watch the other speaker videos on the TEDxSanAntonio 2011 Playlist on YouTube.


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