Um Al-Gura girls school in Nahr
Atbara, Kassala state. Primary school completion rates stand at
just 26.1% in rural areas of Sudan. Photograph: Yousra
Elbagir/Elephant Media
Balad Al-Nabi Hamad, nine, left
school after a household accident.
“I have 101 girls
registering for first grade next academic year but I can only
accept 50 students,” says principal Iman Hassan.
“I was at home on sick leave but
I wasn’t sure when I’d be going back. Then I started hearing from
the girls in my village that our school had become so beautiful and
I decided to finish the school year,” says Balad.
The school had received a grant
from the UN children’s agency, Unicef, for improvements, which
prompted the board of education, the local council and families in
the area to raise 20,000 SDG (around £2,300) and implement
extensive plans to expand and renovate Um Al-Gura girls school,
Nahr Atbara, Kassala state. The school currently has 605 girls
enrolled.
“I have 101 girls registering
for first grade next academic year but I can only accept 50
students,” says principal Iman Hassan.
Traditional beliefs that
emphasise the role of girls in the household and condone early
marriage have meant that many parents take their daughters out of
school as they approach puberty.
Women's rights and gender
equality,we highlights issues affecting women,
girls and transgender people.
Yet NGO grants, effective
planning from local authorities and national enrolment campaigns
are beginning to shift attitudes and boost attendance numbers. In
some rural areas, girls are taking exams to enter secondary school
for the first time and many who had left school are now
returning.
Word of mouth is also playing a
part, as girls spread stories of their newly renovated schools to
their peers and encourage out-of-school children to
return.
“I left school because it was
far from my home and it wasn’t so pretty. It didn’t have bathrooms
or games or drawings on the walls. But my friends came and told me
about all the new things in the school and I decided to come
back
– I loved it and a lot of the
girls in my village came back with me,” says Inshira’h, a third
grader (the equivalent of year 4 in the UK) from the Fidiaeb girls
school.
Inshira’h lives in a village
outside Kassala town, in the suburb of Fidiaeb. The school’s
headteacher, Iman Bakri, says she has to convince the girls to
leave the grounds at the end of the school day.
In the Abu-Gara’a village in the
eastern Gadarif state, a landowner, Taha El-Toum, was so moved by
the construction of a single classroom for nomadic children by
Unicef and the philanthropic organisation Dubai Cares that he
donated a large area of land where a further four classrooms were
built.
The village completely uprooted
and gathered around the school, changing its name from Abu-Gara’a
to Um El-Qura – Arabic for “the Mother of Villages” – with more
than four tribes moving to the area hoping to enrol their
children.
With only five classrooms, girls
are being taught side-by-side with their male counterparts – which
is unheard of among such conservative communities.
Mixed classes at Um El-Qura school, in the
eastern Gadarif state – a break from the rural area’s conservative
traditions. Photograph: Yousra Elbagir/Elephant Media
The majority of the
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“I want my daughters to study in
segregated classes but I’m compelled to send them to school
regardless. I want my daughters to be educated so I have to bite my
tongue,” says Ahmed Mohamed Ibrahim, who has three daughters
enrolled at the school.
Despite the controversy,
enrolment has more than doubled. From 41 students last year, there
are now 107 pupils enrolled to start their first year of school in
the coming academic year.
Like Um El-Qura, Nahr Atbara is
one of many conservative communities in the east of Sudan that have
undergone a fundamental shift, with many parents abandoning
traditional views on female schooling and urging their daughters to
pursue higher education.
“Women are the foundation of the
family. The mothers in our community that were educated have
children that behave distinctly differently to the children born to
uneducated women – whether they have boys or girls,” says Mohamed
Ahmed Yusuf, head of the education administration in the Nahr
Atbara locality.
“When a child comes home from
school, they have a teacher at home to go over their schooling with
them. To monitor their clothes, their food, their health – an
education that is continued in the home.”
Other regions are now following
suit.
“In the Hamish-Koreb region [in
Kassala state] there was no education of girls whatsoever. After
the national enrolment campaigns implemented by Unicef this year
and the last, the locality approached us and requested that we
build a girls school for them for the first time in history,” says
Ahmed Abbo, education officer for Unicef in the east of
Sudan.
The last time the agency built a
girls school in Hamish-Koreb, it was demolished.
Now, tribal heads are taking
initiative to ensure that their daughters have a place to
learn.
“In Hamish-Koreb, Aroma, Shamal
Al Delta, and other rural areas all over Kassala, there are now
girls schools where it was unheard of for a woman to be remotely
educated,” says Majzoub Abu Musa, the minister of education for
Kassala State. “In Dabal Oweit and Tahjar, girls are taking their
primary school exams to get into secondary school for the first
time in history.”
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