The Taliban In Afghanistan Is Still Preventing Girls From Getting Above A Sixth-Grade Education, So This Kabul Resident Is Running A Secret School
World,Afghanistan,Taliban,Asia,Education,Women,Persecution,Islam
She was only able to put them off for so long until there she was, inside a police station in Kabul being interrogated by the Taliban. Sodaba Nazhand knew she had to be careful — not only was her personal safety at risk, but so was a clandestine operation she had started just months ago.
Nazhand’s operation involved something that wouldn’t typically be considered illegal: teaching. But she was secretly educating primary school–age girls and street children in defiance of the Taliban’s ban on educating girls beyond the sixth grade, which went into effect more than a year ago.
After three months of teaching a bunch of girls and street children in a nearby park in Kabul, Nazhand had put up a billboard in the area to encourage more students to enroll, which attracted the attention of the Taliban guards, who started interrogating her to find out what she was doing. Nazhand convinced them that she was offering religious lessons along with some basic education to street children.
It worked for a while. In the weeks that followed, her secret school for girls attracted more students, including the daughter of a Taliban commander from Kunduz province in northern Afghanistan who had never been able to go to school due to war and her father’s hardline ideology.
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