Schools for girls come out of shadows
OAKLAND ROSS / TORONTO STAR January 21, 2007 KABUL
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Grade 9 students in the Parwan-e-dou section of Kabul crowd into a tiny classroom at a school for girls and women denied an education during the Taliban regime. Afghanistan | The brave teachers who defied Taliban edicts have a new challenge – finding the necessary resources to educate vast numbers of young women who crave the schooling that was forbidden by the clerics. By Oakland Ross
Any day that the thought police don't come around to thrash her with a steel cable counts as a good day for Gulghota Hashimi.
"When the Taliban came, they beat me up," says the soft-spoken but evidently iron-willed mother of two young sons. "My boys were screaming and crying."
Hashimi is referring to the cabal of fundamentalist clerics and their acolytes who tyrannized this country from 1996 till 2001, especially the dunderhead thugs from the Ministry of Vice and Virtue who patrolled the streets here, ensuring that men wore beards, women wore burqas, no kites flew and nary a girl attended school.
But Hashimi is a teacher.
She taught prior to the dark days of the Taliban. She continued to teach, albeit clandestinely, even after the Taliban came to power and promptly outlawed formal education for girls. And she teaches now.
In fact, she is a principal – and not just any principal.
The school Hashimi now runs was set up to provide an education to the girls and women who could not go to school while the Taliban regime was imposing its stern and suffocating rule.
The school occupies a two-storey, yellow-stucco house in the Parwan-e-dou section of the capital, employs 20 teachers and daily attends to the dreams and ambitions of 263 girls and women, ranging in age from 13 to 35.
"This year, we have our first class of 11th-
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OAKLAND ROSS / TORONTO STAR January 21, 2007 KABUL
Article Link
Grade 9 students in the Parwan-e-dou section of Kabul crowd into a tiny classroom at a school for girls and women denied an education during the Taliban regime. Afghanistan | The brave teachers who defied Taliban edicts have a new challenge – finding the necessary resources to educate vast numbers of young women who crave the schooling that was forbidden by the clerics. By Oakland Ross
Any day that the thought police don't come around to thrash her with a steel cable counts as a good day for Gulghota Hashimi.
"When the Taliban came, they beat me up," says the soft-spoken but evidently iron-willed mother of two young sons. "My boys were screaming and crying."
Hashimi is referring to the cabal of fundamentalist clerics and their acolytes who tyrannized this country from 1996 till 2001, especially the dunderhead thugs from the Ministry of Vice and Virtue who patrolled the streets here, ensuring that men wore beards, women wore burqas, no kites flew and nary a girl attended school.
But Hashimi is a teacher.
She taught prior to the dark days of the Taliban. She continued to teach, albeit clandestinely, even after the Taliban came to power and promptly outlawed formal education for girls. And she teaches now.
In fact, she is a principal – and not just any principal.
The school Hashimi now runs was set up to provide an education to the girls and women who could not go to school while the Taliban regime was imposing its stern and suffocating rule.
The school occupies a two-storey, yellow-stucco house in the Parwan-e-dou section of the capital, employs 20 teachers and daily attends to the dreams and ambitions of 263 girls and women, ranging in age from 13 to 35.
"This year, we have our first class of 11th-
More on link