Its teachers have not been paid for two months and several say they were bombed out of their homes in the final battles, but they are staggering on, somehow, for their students, most of them girls.
“My home has been destroyed by a bombing, even my shoes have been ripped to pieces, but I am still willing to come here and work,” said one geography teacher, Arezoo Sayedi, who shared photos of fragments of the shell that ripped apart her home weeks earlier.
They are missing almost half their students and unclear about the future of their jobs. The Taliban brought in a de facto ban on education for teenage girls . Boys in grades 7 to 12 have been back at school for two weeks, while girls have been ordered to stay home.
Those girls make up 1,600 of the Malalay school’s 3,600 female students, and it is unclear if they will ever be allowed back, or what will happen to the women employed to teach them.
Teachers who are mothers of teenage girls say they will leave Afghanistan unless their daughters are allowed to study, even though they want to stay in their homes and jobs. “My daughter is in 8th grade and she is still at home,” said one teacher, whose family fled Afghanistan the first time the Taliban came to power, a generation ago, allowing her to get an education . “If schools don’t restart here, our family is ready to go and be refugees again.”
The Taliban have asked women – many of them educated abroad last time the group were in power – to return to work in the healthcare and education sectors , while blocking the training of a new generation. The irony is not lost on Afghan women.
This story is from the October 01, 2021 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the October 01, 2021 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Composer of N0n, Je ne Regrette Rien, Charles Dumont, dies at 95
Charles Dumont composed melodies for French and international stars ranging from Dalida to Jacques Brel, Juliette Greco and Barbra Streisand
Xi praises Starmer for 'fixing' UK economy in meeting at G20 in Rio
The Chinese president has heaped praise on Keir Starmer's economic policy, as the prime minister used their first meeting to raise concerns about sanctions on MPs and the treatment of the pro-democracy campaigner Jimmy Lai.
'More than one in three children in poverty'
More than one in three children and a quarter of adults are in poverty in the UK after deprivation levels have risen to their highest in the 21st century, according to a report.
C of E may rethink top role, says senior cleric
The Church of England may need to rethink the role of archbishop of Canterbury in response to its \"unprecedented crisis\" over an abuse cover-up, Justin Welby's second-in-command has said.
UK expected to follow US in letting Kyiv use missiles to attack Russia
Kremlin spokesman accuses Washington of 'reckless' escalation
Climate Crisis To Blame For Formerly 'Impossible' Heat, Studies Reveal
At least 24 previously impossible heatwaves have struck communities across the planet, a new assessment has shown, providing stark evidence of how severely human-caused global heating is supercharging extreme weather.
Borthwick claims players were unfit for start of series
Steve Borthwick has claimed his England players were not fit enough for Test rugby when they began their autumn internationals after Saturday's defeat by South Africa extended their dismal losing run.
Exciting times ahead' Carsley hails new generation as he hands over to Tuchel
Lee Carsley predicted that competition for places in Thomas Tuchel's first squad will be fiercer than ever, after his stint as England's interim head coach ended with a 5-0 thrashing of the Republic of Ireland in the Nations League.
Kane has been the defining player of a successful era, but this thing has run its course
Below the hum of the crowd every time Kane took the ball, he was rearranging his legs like a pantomime horse
Harwood-Bellis starts party as Carsley signs off with promotion
It was an England salvo of devastating power, three goals in five minutes early in the second half and it did more than reframe an occasion that had been flat and forgettable until then.