Jakarta Globe – AFP, Edouard Guihaire, July 14, 2013
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| In this picture taken on July 8, 2013, Afghan schoolgirls study during a lesson in the village of Dah Yaya in Dih Sabz District of Kabul province. (AFP Photo) |
Dah Yaya,
Afghanistan. Dah Yaya is an Afghan village set in stony hills and steeped in
traditions that limit women to second-class status in this desperately poor
country ravaged by Taliban insurgency.
But in a
school set up by an Afghan-American woman named a 2012 top 10 hero by TV
network CNN, girls are learning to dream of a different future, of saying “no”
to the dictats of their elders.
Just a
40-minute drive from Kabul, the village feels as if it’s in the middle of
nowhere. The road winds through the arid, dusty hills that encircle the Afghan
capital, past mud-brick homes.
Women and
girls wear burqas. Only once they are safely behind the gates of the Zabuli
Education Center, do school girls take them off and leave them hanging on a
banister.
Founded by
Razia Jan as part of her battle to educate girls in rural Afghanistan, the
school wants to exact change in a country notorious for dreadful women’s
rights.
“I have 400
girls,” says Jan, who founded the school in 2008. Funded by private donors, it
offers a free education to pupils.
“We made
these girls speak for themselves, so that if something terrible happens in
their life and they don’t want it, they fight it, they have the force to say
no, no, no,” she added.
“The more
education there is, the more doors open for them.”
A massive
increase in the number of girls going to school since the fall of the
repressive Taliban regime in 2001 is touted as one of the biggest achievements
of Western intervention in the country.
From 1996
to 2001, the Taliban banned girls from going out to school. According to the
Afghan education ministry, 42 percent of children in school are girls.
But poor
attendance and absenteeism are major problems. Regular, high-profile cases of
abuse, intimidation and violence underscore that for many women in parts of the
country, little has changed.
But the
Zabuli Education Center provides girls with better than average teaching. Girls
learn English as young as four, and they also have access to computers and to
the Internet.
Some
profess to being fans of US superstar Jennifer Lopez and Canadian heart throb
Justin Bieber — pop singers far beyond the traditional horizons of Afghan
culture.
Zuhal
Ansaari, 15, is passionate about art and is convinced that one day she can
realise her dreams of becoming a teacher.
“Women and
men have the same rights,” she told AFP.
“If a woman
is educated, her role in the family becomes more important, she can teach her
children and have a better life, because she knows at least the same thing as
her husband.”
Nazaneen
Jahd, 14, even believes that one day a woman could lead the country if she is
properly educated and gets the chance.
“I hope
that very soon there will be one,” she said.
According
to the UN Girls’ Education Initiative, the literacy rate for Afghan women aged
15-24 is 18 percent, compared to 50 percent for boys, and only 13 percent of
girls complete primary school.
It quotes
statistics estimating the mean age of marriage at 17 years while child
marriages (where at least one participant is under 18) account for 43 percent
of all marriages, which plays a part in the gender gap in education.
“When a
girl becomes an adult or a teenager, their parents, especially their father,
can force a girl to marry, even with a 65-year-old man,” says Nahid Alawi, a
teacher at the school.
The school
may not be able to interfere in family matters, but its mission is to support
those girls who put their foot down.
“I can give
her advice: it’s not time for her to get married, but unfortunately some
families force them to get married,” Alawi said.
Rahila
Rohullah, in ninth grade, fought with her family for six months when her father
tried to beat and threaten her into marrying the father of a woman he wanted to
marry himself.
She
resisted, finding at school the comfort that allowed her to hold out until her
father finally gave up.
“It’s my
own decision who I will marry, and I wont allow my parents to force me. It’s every
girl’s right,” she said.
Mer
Ruhullah, the village chief who sends four of his daughters to the school, said
attitudes were starting to change and praised the school for changing the lives
of girls in the village.
“There is
no doubt there are people who don’t want such a girls’ school in our village.
There are also people who don’t send their girls to school, but times have
changed. People are more open-minded now,” he said.
But Jan
still fears that one day her efforts could be destroyed if the Taliban return
to government in any peace deal after US-led NATO combat troops withdraw next
year.
“You cannot
trust them, they’re murderers,” she said.
“When a
snake bites you once, you don’t go to the den again to get bitten,” she said.
Agence France-Presse
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