From the BBC:
“BBC show is a 'lifeline' for Afghan girls, UN says”
(Shazia Haya presents the BBC Dars programme, which means
lesson in Afghanistan's official languages of Dari and Pashto)
A BBC programme for children barred from schools in
Afghanistan has been described as a "learning lifeline" by the United
Nations. The show is being used in secret school lessons, the BBC has learned. Its
name, Dars, means lesson in Afghanistan's official languages of Dari and
Pashto. The ruling Taliban prohibits girls from receiving secondary or higher education.
On the day she was told she could no longer come to work at school, Afsana, who
is a teacher, lost her purpose in life.
The 28-year-old worked at a secondary school for girls in
eastern Afghanistan. Now, like some other former teachers in the country, she
has set up a secret school. Twenty-five students, all girls, between the ages
of 12 and 18, gather in her basement. The only tools she has are a whiteboard,
a phone and the BBC Dars programme. With no signal in her makeshift classroom,
Afsana downloads short videos of the show to play to the students, who then
write her a summary of what they have seen. "My students watch with
interest and passion," she says. "Their hopes have been raised and
they are still dreaming for the future."
The show, which has just launched its second series on TV,
online and radio, is hosted by BBC female journalists who themselves fled Kabul
more than two years ago, after the Taliban's return to power. Any form of
learning "provides safety hope and opportunity", says Yasmine Sherif,
the executive director of Education Cannot Wait, the United Nations global fund
for the education of children in crisis. “Community-based education or remote
learning, such as the BBC's Dars programme, offers them the learning lifeline which
they so desperately need," she adds.
(Mariam Aman is a producer on the show, adapting existing BBC
teaching content, covering maths, history, science and ICT)
While it keeps students in touch with their education, it is
not a replacement for school. Until girls and women are allowed back into the
classroom their future in Afghanistan is bleak.
The Taliban government says the bar on girls' education in
Afghanistan is temporary and once a curriculum in line with Islamic and Afghan
traditions is put in place, girls will be able to return to the classroom.
However, this has not satisfied many Afghan observers who say hopes of schools
being reopened have been dented by the increasing restrictions imposed on
women. "This country has become a graveyard for our hopes," says
21-year-old Razia from Nangarhar province in eastern Afghanistan. Her life
completely changed when she was stopped from going to classes in the final year
of her journalism degree. "Afghanistan is a prison we are trying to
escape," she explains.
Razia makes her younger siblings watch the programme,
including her 12-year-old sister who dreams of becoming a doctor. But life is
tough in Afghanistan for young women. "We cry every day. We have totally
lost our self-confidence. I even feel resentful towards every man in the
country," Razia admits.
(A teacher writes on a whiteboard during class at a secret
school on August 14, 2022 in Kabul, Afghanistan)
In the late 1990s, during the Taliban's previous rule, an
entire generation of Afghan girls faced the same devastating restrictions on
education. A fortunate few, including myself, went elsewhere. I now work in the
UK and have lived here for more than 20 years. However, for the majority of
girls in Afghanistan, like my cousins, marrying young became the norm. Today
they are having to relive their trauma as their teenage daughters face the same
fate.
Another person who watches Dars every week is 16-year-old
Amina, who hasn't set foot in a classroom for more than two years. She misses
the routine that school provided and without classes to attend she spends her
days with her mother learning to cook traditional Afghan dishes. A friend
recommended the BBC programme Dars to her and she says watching it makes her
feel she is regaining a small amount of control over her life. "There
hadn't been a proper educational programme to learn something new, so when Dars
started, it gave me hope," she reveals. Amina tells us via a WhatsApp
voice message that she used to feel as though the world had forgotten about
girls in Afghanistan. "I was wondering if there are people out there that
care about me," she says. "I hope one day I will be able to go back
to school, but until then Dars can help me to feel connected with my
classroom."
Some names in this story have been changed for security
reasons.
^ It is so sad to continue to hear how the Taliban make
everyone suffer. ^
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