The Four Generations Project is an exciting and typically ambitious brainchild of Sveva Gallmann's. Aimed at staunching the gradual loss of traditional tribal knowledge and encouraging a reconnection with and respect for the natural environment, the project inspires youth to actively seek out and share the wisdom of their elders."; $path = ""; $bottomright = "br-aboutus.php" ?> Sveva Gallmann graduated in Human Sciences at New College, Oxford, in 2002, winning the Wilmer Crowther award for best overall achievement in the Honour School. She has now returned to Ol ari Nyiro to help her mother in their shared pledge to protect and preserve the conservancy for the future. She divides her time between Kenya and the UK and has recently been busy initiating the Great Rift Valley Festival, reflecting her passion for music. With experience in a wide range of projects around the world, from a year as a volunteer in a leprosarium in India to dolphin rehabilitation in the Red Sea, she has also spoken at the State of the World Forum in Belfast and the Conference of Spiritual and Religious Leaders in Geneva. Svevašs most recent initiative, the Four Generations Project, monitors and records significant rituals, songs and oral traditions of the local tribes, encouraging the children to re-discover their heritage and attempting to slow the gradual loss of this phenomenal breadth of knowledge and wisdom.