Mali

Young trees, for article on African reforestation

The TREES program has planted tens of millions of trees across Africa since 2015

Reforestation done right looks less like a planting day and more like a four-year partnership with farmers — and the TREES program has quietly restored more than 41,000 hectares across nine African countries, an area roughly seven times the size of Manhattan. Instead of dropping seeds on remote land, TREES helps smallholder families build “forest gardens” of about 5,800 trees per hectare, weaving in fruit orchards, food crops, and windbreaks that feed households and generate a market surplus. In Kenya’s Kesouma region alone, 17,000 farmers have joined in. Earlier this year, the UN named it a World Restoration Flagship — a reminder that the most durable climate work tends to be the kind that pays the people doing it.

Flag of Mali Federation, for article on Mali Federation formation

Senegal and French Sudan unite to form the Mali Federation

The Mali Federation was born on January 17, 1959, when Senegal and the Sudanese Republic merged in a bold bet on pan-African unity ahead of independence. Architects Léopold Sédar Senghor and Modibo Keïta borrowed the name from medieval West African empires, arguing that fragmented micro-states would struggle alone. The union dissolved within two years, but its ambition echoed across the continent’s independence movements.