Dadaab (Kenya) (AFP)
- Soon after dawn Bashir Bilal sat outside on his usual plastic jerry can
surrounded by young girls and boys chanting Koranic verses.
Each child clutched
a worn plank of wood instead of an exercise book, writing on it in Arabic
script with ink made from charcoal and water.
In Somalia the
Islamic madrassa is often the only education on offer, but here in the Dadaab
refugee camps it is just the start. Later in the day the children are able to
attend, for free, primary and even secondary school while scholarships are
available for college education.
Uprooted and
dispossessed, life as a refugee is tough. But for the Somalis who have for
years, or even decades, called Dadaab home there are opportunities too.
Bilal, 47, used to
live in Afgoye, a breadbasket town 30 kilometres (18 miles) northwest of the
capital Mogadishu. When he came to Dadaab five years ago he found better
schooling options than at home where fees were high and children would often
spend their days helping out on the family farm. Read Full Article
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