Nohemie & Co.
🔗 Subscribe to my Substack for unfiltered field notes: LINK [https://nohemieco.substack.com/?utm_campaign=pub&utm_medium=web] 📘 Get the Congo Business Starter Kit: LINK [https://nohemie.gumroad.com/l/sdhjhd] I spent my Christmas holiday studying a question that had been haunting me for years. How did a community lose their homeland, their political power, everything—and still build networks of wealth and influence that survived centuries of displacement? Not conspiracy theories. Not secrets. Systems. In this episode of Nohémie & Co.The Diaspora Playbook, I reverse‑engineer the Jewish diaspora's economic operating system—and the uncomfortable parallels to our own African diaspora journey. We cover: * The guilt ceiling. I realized I'd been self‑sabotaging at the edge of success because somewhere, I absorbed the idea that wealth is dirty. That poverty is somehow more spiritual. A rabbi I studied put it bluntly: "Poverty is not a virtue—it's a deficiency to be remedied." * Survival mode vs. sovereignty thinking. For generations, both communities optimized for portability, not permanence. We buy cars, not companies. Houses, not institutions. We're still operating like everything can be taken tomorrow—even when the conditions have changed. * Reactive giving vs. strategic institutions. Our remittances are generous but they evaporate. Tzedakah—their systematic giving—builds permanent infrastructure. Hospitals, schools, loan funds. Institutions that serve generations and create centers of influence. * The mindset shift that changed everything for me. When I stopped seeing profit as "my money" and started seeing it as covenant capital flowing through me to my community, the guilt dissolved. The business grew. This is not about religion. It's about studying a 5,000‑year‑old system of capital preservation and multiplication that has thrived in every diaspora condition imaginable. There are profound, respectful lessons here for communities seeking to build intergenerational wealth against the odds. If you've ever felt guilty about wanting to build—or wondered why we don't own the institutions that serve us—this episode is for you. Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and everywhere you get your podcasts. 🎧 Subscribe to Nohémie & Co The Diaspora Playbook for more real‑talk about building in Africa. Watch podcast: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVAJz0U6f5kFxewSV_HjI4EJaNqT5pt1r Give us a follow on TT & IG: @nandcopod #NandCopod #Podcast #Africa #Business #FounderStory #Congo
22 episodios
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