New Leaf Foundation was born from a deeply personal encounter with the realities of Nigeria's prisonsystem. The founder, Dolapo Olowu, spent years observing well-meaning Christians and volunteersmaking regular visits to correctional facilities — preaching the Word, distributing Bibles, and prayingwith inmates. While these acts of spiritual kindness were warmly received, they seldom resulted inlasting transformation for the inmates who were eventually released.
The challenge was starkly visible: former inmates were returning to their communities with the sameempty hands and diminished prospects they had before incarceration. The stigma of imprisonment,combined with a lack of employable skills, left re-entering citizens vulnerable to recidivism — not from adesire to reoffend, but from the desperate circumstances of poverty and rejection.
Determined to bridge this gap, Dolapo Olowu founded New Leaf Foundation with a dual mandate — thespiritual transformation of inmates through the Good News of Christ, and the practical empowerment ofthose same inmates through structured, marketable skills acquisition. The name "New Leaf" itselfspeaks to the heart of the mission: turning over a new page, beginning a new chapter, and findingrenewal in the most unlikely of places.
From its origins as a small initiative in Nigeria, New Leaf Foundation has grown into a multi-nationalorganisation with registered operations in the United States, a mission office in Nigeria, and programmepartnerships extending to Kenya. Today, NLF stands as one of the most dynamic voices in themovement for humane prison reform and effective inmate rehabilitation across Africa and its diaspora.