Lessons After the Silence
Communities and partners like the Norwegian Refugee Council are bringing schools back to life and students back to learning in
AL GENEINA,
This classroom, once reduced to near rubble by the armed conflict, has transformed into a sanctuary for these children.
"Education had almost disappeared," said Teacher
The conflict in
But against all odds, hope has begun to emerge.
Thanks to the support of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), with funding from Education Cannot Wait (ECW), an initiative to rebuild and reopen schools in Al Geneina was launched. This initiative is part of ECW's Multi-Year Resilience Programme in
Building Education in Al Geneina
When the fighting finally stopped in Al Geneina, the families and children left could barely recognize their town – let alone the destroyed schools around them. Since the conflict in
But the community was determined to keep learning alive.
Teachers and parents banded together and began holding lessons in the damaged classrooms, and even under trees, using whatever tools and resources were at hand.
Responding to the education crisis and the community's strong desire to ensure
Accelerated education programmes were also established, allowing children who had fallen behind due to the armed conflict to catch up on the learning they'd missed.
After 10 months of the accelerated education classes, more than 2,000 children who were forced out of school due to the conflict were able to take their transitional exams in March. This marked a critical step to them rejoining the formal school system.
Students and parents alike see these exams as a beacon of hope.
"Without education, children become homeless. We want them to be educated and cultured so they can benefit the country," says
The students who passed the assessment advanced to the next academic level, and are able to transition to formal schools once they are officially reopened.
ECW and partners like NRC continue to support children and adolescents in the whole of
ECW in
Two and a half years since the start of the armed conflict, more than half of the country's population requires humanitarian assistance – including 16 million children who lack access to food, water, shelter, education and healthcare. Most schools across the country remain shuttered and are struggling to re-open, leaving 16.5 million children out of school.
ECW investments in the country, which began in 2021, total
In times of crisis, education supports not only academic growth but also provides stability, normalcy and protection. Schools provide displaced girls and boys with a secure space to recover from the trauma of conflict. Additionally, they protect children from dangerous practices such as child marriage, child labor and forced recruitment into armed groups, offering them the opportunity to chase their dreams and build a better future.
For children in
For Teacher
"The war has caused immense destruction. We were psychologically broken," she says. "We could not imagine that schools would return as they did. But they did. And today, hope has returned with them."
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lessons-after-the-silence-302637028.html
SOURCE Education Cannot Wait
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