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Quiet revolution underway in
Afghan girls' schools
By Terry Friel
September 20, 2005 - (Reuters) A quiet revolution
is going on in Afghanistan's schools, behind the high walls and
the blue-uniformed police guards with their AK-47s. "Afghanistan's
beautiful girls are learning!" proclaims a cheerful U.N. poster
at the Zarghona Ana school for girls in the hot and dusty southern
trading city of Kandahar, the birthplace of the hardline Taliban.
During Taliban rule until 2001, girls' schools were shut down and
women placed under virtual house arrest, allowed out only with a
male escort and wearing coverall burqas.
Now, schools have become the breeding ground for
women's rights. And for teaching girls about the world outside."At
first, only a few girls came, they were all afraid," says teacher
Zarmina, who uses only one name. "We had no chairs, no tables,
they had to bring their own carpet to sit on. Now, all the girls
are coming." For Afghan women, barred for years from even the
simplest of jobs, school is often the first step outside the family
home. Many of the more than 300 women candidates in last Sunday's
elections for a national Wolesi Jirga, or House of the People, and
34 provincial assemblies were teachers. "Four years ago, we
could not even go outside our home," says Zarghona Kaker, running
for the Kandahar state assembly. "We could not even go to the
bazaar without a man. "Now, we can run for the parliament."
Future Looks Bright
On Sunday, girls' schools became women-only voting stations,
where women could come, throw off their head-to-toe burqas and excitedly
debate politics and their problems. "I'm so happy," says
11-year-old Fariba, wearing her pinstriped school uniform of black
and gray and no burqa. "I'm learning here, it gives me a future
-- something to look forward to." Three months ago, 18 students
from Zarghona Ana school became the first women to graduate since
the early 1990s in Afghanistan's ancient capital and now its second
city.
"There was a time, under the Taliban, when
we didn't even know what education was. Now we are learning everything,"
said 13-year-old Wajiha Hussaini. She was one of the first students
to come back to Zarghona after the Taliban were ousted by U.S.-led
forces. School then meant just turning up, with no books, no blackboard
and untrained, volunteer teachers. "We had a lot of problems,"
she says. "We didn't even have chairs. And all the good teachers
were in other countries because of the fighting." Now, she
wants to go to university and become a doctor, "to help Afghan".
Afghan women are tough, and determined. Fariba, rushing to catch
a crowded lorry, the only one that will take her home through the
hard-baked streets of Kandahar, knows exactly what she wants. "I
want to be an engineer," she says, looking anxiously at the
door, wanting to go. "I want to make buildings. I want to build
more schools.
From:
http://today.reuters.com/news/NewsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=uri:2005-09-20T145457Z_01_SPI047555_RTRUKOC_0_US-AFGHAN-WOMEN.xml&pageNumber=1&summit=
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