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Afghan Educator Of Uprooted Girls Wins UN Refugee Award

Afghan Educator Of Uprooted Girls Wins UN Refugee Award

 

GENEVA, Switzerland: Aqeela Asifi, who has dedicated her life to bringing education to Afghan refugee girls in Pakistan, was on Tuesday awarded the UN refugee agency’s annual Nansen prize.

Asifi, a 49-year-old teacher who fled from Afghanistan with her family in 1992, was given the prestigious award for “her brave and tireless dedication to education for Afghan refugee girls,” UNHCR said in a statement.

Before she arrived in the Kot Chandana refugee village in Mianwali in northern Pakistan, strict cultural traditions had kept most girls at home, but Asifi slowly managed to convince the community to allow her to teach them.

She initially began teaching a handful of girls in a tent, copying out worksheets by hand.

“Despite minimal resources and significant cultural challenges, Asifi has guided a thousand refugee girls through their primary education,” the agency said, pointing out that her efforts came while she was herself facing the challenges of life in exile.

“When you have mothers who are educated, you will almost certainly have future generations who are educated,” Asifi said in the statement.

“So if you educate girls, you educate generations,” she said, adding: “I wish for the day when people will remember Afghanistan not for war but for its standard of education.”

Afghanistan represents one of the largest and most protracted refugee crisis in the world, with over 2.6 million Afghans currently living in exile — more than half of them children, according to UN numbers.

Globally though only one in every two refugee children are able to go to primary school and only one in four attend secondary school.

And for Afghan refugee children in Pakistan the numbers are even more dire, with around 80 percent of them out of school, UNHCR said.

“Access to quality and safe education helps children grow into adults who go on to secure jobs, start businesses and help build their communities, and it makes them less vulnerable to exploitation and abuse,” UN refugee chief Antonio Guterres said in the statement.

“People like Aqeela Asifi understand that today’s refugee children will determine the future of their countries, and the future of the world,” he said.

The Nansen award was created in 1954 in honour of the first UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Norwegian Arctic explorer Fridtjof Nansen, to mark outstanding work on behalf of refugees.

Asifi will receive her commemorative medal and $100,000 (88,500 euros) in prize money — to use to fund a project that compliments her existing work — at a ceremony in Geneva on October 5.


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