In 1998, John Wood was an executive at Microsoft who left for an 18-day escape to the Himalayas. While there, he was startled to learn that a library for 450 children had no books, and he heard something that he’s never forgotten. “‘In Nepal, we’re too poor to afford education, but until we have education, we’re always going to be poor.’ And that just hit me at the gut level of being a terrible Catch-22,” he said. Wood eventually left Microsoft and made literacy in the world’s most impoverished countries his new life mission.
In his State of the Union speech, President Barack Obama outlined his education plans for students within the United States. Wood, meanwhile, is working on improving the state of education for students in developing countries. Getting more people access to books, he stresses, can dramatically affect one family’s status for generations.
The author of “Creating Room to Read: A Story of Hope in the Battle for Global Literacy,” he founded the organization called “Room to Read.” It’s now America’s fastest-growing non-profit to promote worldwide literacy.
“I thought, why not do for the poorest parts of the developing world what Andrew Carnegie did for the U.S?,” he said, referring to the American industrialist and philanthropist who expanded public libraries across the country. “It pays dividends for millions of people, generation after generation after generation.”
The United Nations reports that there are 775 million people around the planet who can’t read even at a first grade level.








