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Banned from school, Afghan girls turn to madrassas

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Banned from school, Afghan girls turn to madrassas

AFP
March 16, 2023


<p>Afghan girls learn the holy Quran at a madrassa or an Islamic school on the outskirts of Kabul. — AFP</p>


Afghan girls learn the holy Quran at a madrassa or an Islamic school on the outskirts of Kabul. — AFP

In a madrassa in the Afghan capital, rows of teenage girls rock back and forth reciting verses of the Quran under the watchful eye of a religious scholar.

The number of Islamic schools has grown across Afghanistan since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021, with teenage girls increasingly attending classes after they were banned from secondary schools.

“We were depressed because we were denied an education,” said 16-year-old Farah, a veil covering her face and hair.

“It’s then that my family decided I should at least come here. The only open place for us now is a madrassa.”

Instead of maths and literature, the girls focus on rote-learning the Quran in Arabic — a language most of them don’t understand.

Those who want to learn the meaning of the verses study separately, where a teacher translates and explains the text in their local language.

AFP visited three madrassas in Kabul and in the southern city of Kandahar, where scholars said the number of girl students has doubled since last year.

For Farah, her ambition of becoming a lawyer was dashed when Taliban authorities blocked girls from secondary school — and months later banned women from attending university.

“Everyone’s dreams are lost,” she said.

Still, Farah — whose real name has been changed to protect her identity like other students AFP interviewed for this story — counts herself lucky in that her parents allowed her to attend classes at all.

Education deadlock​

The Taliban government adheres to an austere interpretation of Islam.

Rulings are passed down by the reclusive supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada and his inner circle of religious advisers, who are against education for girls and women, some officials say.

Akhundzada has ordered hundreds of new madrassas to be built as he establishes his Islamic Emirate based on sharia.

Authorities in Kabul have given several excuses for the closure of girls’ schools — including the need for segregated classrooms and Islamic uniforms, which were largely already in place.

The government insists schools will eventually reopen.

Education is the main sticking point behind a deadlock with the international community, which has condemned the stripping away of freedoms for women and girls.

No country has recognised the Taliban government, which is battling to keep afloat an economy where more than half the population face starvation, according to aid agencies.

Hosna, a former university student studying medicine, now teaches at a madrassa in Kandahar, reading verses of the Quran to a class of more than 30 girls who repeat the words back to her.

In this picture taken on February 13, 2023, Afghan girls learn the holy Quran at a madrassa or an Islamic school on the outskirts of Kabul. — AFP


In this picture taken on February 13, 2023, Afghan girls learn the holy Quran at a madrassa or an Islamic school on the outskirts of Kabul. — AFP

“Studying in universities helps to build a future, makes us aware of our rights,” she said. “But there is no future in madrassas. They are studying here because they are helpless.”

The madrassa, located in an old building, has small classrooms with no electricity.

Despite the financial constraints faced by the management of the school, dozens of students attend classes for free.

Friendship and distraction​

The educational value of madrassas is subject to fierce debate, with experts saying they do not provide the necessary skills for gainful employment as adults.

“Given the present conditions, the need for modern education is a priority,” said Abdul Bari Madani, a scholar who frequently appears on local TV to discuss religious affairs.

Islamic schools have grown across Afghanistan since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021, with teenage girls increasingly attending classes after they were banned from secondary schools. — AFP


Islamic schools have grown across Afghanistan since the Taliban returned to power in August 2021, with teenage girls increasingly attending classes after they were banned from secondary schools. — AFP

“Efforts need to be taken so that the Islamic world is not left behind… letting go of modern education is like betraying the nation.”

Around the world, some madrassas have been associated with militancy.

Many of the Taliban’s leaders were educated at the Darul Uloom Haqqania madrassa in Pakistan, which earned the nickname “University of Jihad”.

Niamatullah Ulfat, head of Islamic Studies at Kandahar province’s education department, said the government is “thinking day and night on how to increase madrassas”.

“The idea is that we can bring the new generation of this country into the world with good training, good teachings and good ethics,” he told AFP.

Yalda, whose father is an engineer and mother was a teacher under the ousted US-backed regime, was top of her class at her old school, but still shines at the madrassa and has memorised the Quran within 15 months.

“A madrassa cannot help me in becoming a doctor… But it’s still good. It’s good for expanding our religious knowledge,” the 16-year-old said.

The madrassa, on the outskirts of Kabul, is divided into two blocks – one for girls and the other for boys.

Still, classes are held at different times to ensure there is no interaction at all between the two genders.

Several girls told AFP that attending a madrassa does provide some stimulation — and the chance to be with friends.
“I tell myself that someday the schools might open and my education will resume,” said Sara.
If not, she is determined to learn one way or the other.

“Now that there are smartphones and the internet… schools are not the only way to get an education,” she added.


 
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Bearded cavemen have nothing to do with Islam. The Prophet said get knowledge even if you have to travel to China. These bearded fvckers should be shot in the balls.
 
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Bearded cavemen have nothing to do with Islam.

So please remind me when and where was the first verse revealed?







Note: No offence intended. This is just to show that these fools are trying to emulate that noble event in their sick minds. That is all.
 
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Bearded cavemen have nothing to do with Islam. The Prophet said get knowledge even if you have to travel to China. These bearded fvckers should be shot in the balls.
At least they are offering Islamic education. They can become good knowledgeble muslim.

With 40 million people and 14 billion dollars GDP, they cannot run a country and fund education. Islamic countries should offer online education.
 
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Bearded cavemen have nothing to do with Islam.
And a westernized racist/supremacist attitude towards the Muslims of Afghanistan does?

The Prophet said get knowledge even if you have to travel to China.
The beard that you castigate against is a confirmed sunnah of the Prophet ﷺ.

The authenticity of the hadith about China is at best debatable. It has multiple chains of narration, which potentially gives it validity, but none of the chains are sound. See here, and here, for instance, for discussions from both sides of the argument.

These bearded fvckers should be shot in the balls.
Are you prepared to carry out that shooting? Beards are a natural part of the physiology of the human male, yet you appear to suffer from an anti-beard fetish. You should know that shooting someone in the balls, or elsewhere for that matter, won't eliminate their beard.

Neither will it address the issues raised in the article. Did you even bother to read it, much less attempt to critique it in your own hate-filled mind?

The article is a classic propaganda piece, filled with suggestive innuendo, half-truths and non-issues that should be of no concern to the French agency (AFP) that authored it. The real issues here should be those of the lifafa journalism that allows the likes of Dawn to propagate this kind of filth, as well as the intentions of the OP on opening this thread.
 
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Thank you Faiz Hameed and ISI. Thank you GHQ of Pakistan. I pray your doings to our neighbor will not be rebounded on our public one day.

Its time for our respective members to defend this madrissa mania who themselves went to conventional schools and universities and are now enjoying successfull careers and businesses.
 
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Farah can become a lawyer and a judge still. She doesn't have to let go her dreams.
 
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Can they not teach real knowledge subjects in madrassas or they decreed to be limited to quran stuff ?
 
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Thank you Faiz Hameed and ISI. Thank you GHQ of Pakistan. I pray your doings to our neighbor will not be rebounded on our public one day.

Its time for our respective members to defend this madrissa mania who themselves went to conventional schools and universities and are now enjoying successfull careers and businesses.
What the **** does this have to do with us?

This is Pashtun culture. You're acting like we imported this from space to them. It has always been part of them.

Conservative Pashtun culture is well known to be against women's education.
 
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What the **** does this have to do with us?

This is Pashtun culture. You're acting like we imported this from space to them. It has always been part of them.

Conservative Pashtun culture is well known to be against women's education.
Nothing to do with you and me. Everything to do with those who kept supporting their backers when it was none of their business as you just said.
We had nothing to do meddling in there.
And thats not Pashtuun culture sorry to say. Pashtuuns from Zahir shah Era Afghanistan and Ghaffar khan/Wali khan era Pakistan were much more moderate then other sections of society.
Its just that the overdose of Semi atheism pumped in by revolutionary communist into a rather conservative Afghan society back fired. And Our own Gen Zia ul Haq was last nail.in coffin when he redicalized those areas for political goals.
This non sense today was not pashtuun society of 50s 60s and 70s.
Ask one of your elders who had visited Afghanistan during Zahir Shah era.
But any ways no point in crying over spilt milk.
I feel sorry for future of Afghan Kids. They will have to wait another generation now to get rid of these crack heads.
Whatever culture tridition anyone follow should not stop anyone from attending school making career living a life.
 
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Nothing to do with you and me. Everything to do with those who kept supporting their backers when it was none of their business as you just said.
We had nothing to do meddling in there.
And thats not Pashtuun culture sorry to say. Pashtuuns from Zahir shah Era Afghanistan and Ghaffar khan/Wali khan era Pakistan were much more moderate then other sections of society.
Its just that the overdose of Semi atheism pumped in by revolutionary communist into a rather conservative Afghan society back fired. And Our own Gen Zia ul Haq was last nail.in coffin when he redicalized those areas for political goals.
This non sense today was not pashtuun society of 50s 60s and 70s.
Ask one of your elders who had visited Afghanistan during Zahir Shah era.
But any ways no point in crying over spilt milk.
I feel sorry for future of Afghan Kids. They will have to wait another generation now to get rid of these crack heads.
Whatever culture tridition anyone follow should not stop anyone from attending school making career living a life.
We had every right meddling in there I don't understand this cuck statement being constantly repeated.

If Afghanistan chose to mind its own business you'd make sense, but the moment it started meddling in our affairs it was all fair game.

And Bacha Khan is not representative of Pashtuns, his daughter/niece married the same Punjabi Sikh that bombed the **** out of Waziristan

It's like saying Ranjit Singh is representative of Punjabi Muslims. Or liberal Muslims are representative of Islam.
 
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We had every right meddling in there I don't understand this cuck statement being constantly repeated.

If Afghanistan chose to mind its own business you'd make sense, but the moment it started meddling in our affairs it was all fair game.
Results of those policies are right in front of us. No point for us arguing on the logic of that if it is done and results obtained.
If keep repeating the same policy we will not get different results.

There is a reason we have enemies on all of our borders and the only one we consider friend is feeding on the dead body of our economy. 🤷‍♂️
 
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Results of those policies are right in front of us. No point for us arguing on the logic of that if it is done and results obtained.
If keep repeating the same policy we will not get different results.

There is a reason we have enemies on all of our borders and the only one we consider friend is feeding on the dead body of our economy. 🤷‍♂️
Yes and the reason is both sides have colonial expansionist policies, and you're too incompetent to run a nation with a healthy economy so someone sees an opportunity.

Only a coward cuck refuses to defend themselves and will sit here complain about why the establishment retaliated.

No wonder Pakistan is failed, it has a population of spineless cucked sheep that watch their own house burn down but cry tears when someone decides to retaliate

The most honourless cucked population on the planet
 
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Nothing to do with you and me. Everything to do with those who kept supporting their backers when it was none of their business as you just said.
We had nothing to do meddling in there.
And thats not Pashtuun culture sorry to say. Pashtuuns from Zahir shah Era Afghanistan and Ghaffar khan/Wali khan era Pakistan were much more moderate then other sections of society.
Its just that the overdose of Semi atheism pumped in by revolutionary communist into a rather conservative Afghan society back fired. And Our own Gen Zia ul Haq was last nail.in coffin when he redicalized those areas for political goals.
This non sense today was not pashtuun society of 50s 60s and 70s.
Ask one of your elders who had visited Afghanistan during Zahir Shah era.
But any ways no point in crying over spilt milk.
I feel sorry for future of Afghan Kids. They will have to wait another generation now to get rid of these crack heads.
Whatever culture tridition anyone follow should not stop anyone from attending school making career living a life.
Afghans themselves started declared and undeclared war against Pakistan.
So supporting these ulos was our majbori.
 
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