Dr. Amel Karboul

I See Myself in Each of Them
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Article in HUFFPOST EDUCATION, February 02, 2016; Picture: Adam Brown/Crown Copyright

Sadly there is no shortage of tragic stories from Syrian refugees who are still suffering after five years of brutal conflict. But one I read recently resonated with me profoundly. It moved while I read it. It stayed with me for days and days afterwards.

It told the story of a Syrian family of two parents and four children. This was a well off middle class family, the father owned a pharmacy and the mother was an accountant. They shared a house and a garden and experienced daily homework struggles and joyful weekly Sunday brunches. When the war hit too close to home and the children were not safe anymore, they headed to the Lebanese border with their savings. They rented a tiny piece of land where they started sharing a tent.

As the years went on their savings started dwindling, to the point that even food became a luxury. The two twin girls, who both had plans to go to medical school, had to be married at 17 so at least they could be taken care of and the family would have less mouths to feed. Six months ago their 15-year-old boy had to leave school and go to work in the fields. And today the last child, 9-year-old Amina had also to leave school, as they just could not afford it anymore.

This story has stayed with me because I see myself in each of them. I see my dreams shattered at 17 as I have to get married instead of going to University. I see myself exploited at 15 to work 12 hours a day. And I look at my own 9-year-old daughter and can’t imagine how I would feel if I had to take her out of school. Do I wish I wasn’t touched so deeply so I could move on with my own life?

I do not. I come from Tunisia, and education meant everything to me. It meant I would either become someone or no-one. I was given the incredible opportunity to attend public school, an institution that the first president Habib Bourguiba installed and supported after independence so that very Tunisian child would go to school. It was his biggest achievement which he pioneered against all odds and resistance.

In 1956, many did not even have access to water and electricity and people moaned that the state should focus on providing these services before providing education. President Bourguiba was visionary enough to believe that education was the best investment a state could make. And he was right. The Nobel peace prize, which has just been awarded to the Tunisian quartet, also in part, belongs to him. Education is what has saved Tunisia again and again from drifting into chaos.

Unfortunately, today in emergency situations education is often seen as a secondary task. First, aid agencies, charities and states focus on health, security and education comes later with the devastating result that we are losing a whole generation of children in Syria. Instead, we are unfortunately grooming recruits for jihadist and smugglers.

The UN Special Envoy for Global Education, Gordon Brown, has called on businesses and states to deliver the finance to get 1million Syrian refugee children back to school. At Davos, business responded. Over 50 companies have committed $50million to the effort and more is expected to be announced on Thursday. It is not just about financial contributions, but practical suggestions and ideas — technology, for example, can offer innovative methods delivering education to refugee children.

As Heads of State arrive in London for the „Supporting Syria“ Pledging Conference on February 4th, they have an unprecedented opportunity to support this plan and other programs to get every Syrian child in school.

I am grateful and honored to be a member of the International Commission on Financing Global Education Opportunities. The Commission is co-convened by the Norwegian Prime Minister alongside President Michelle Bachelet of Chile, President Joko Widodo of Indonesia, President Peter Mutharika of Malawi and the Director-General of UNESCO, Irina Bokova. It will explore how over the next 15 to 20 years, education could lead to greater economic growth, better health outcomes, and improved global security. In September 2016, the Commission will report to the co-convener and to the Secretary-General of United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, who has agreed to receive the report and act on its recommendations.

I don’t believe that this issue can be left in the too difficult tray — indeed there are compelling moral, economic and security reasons why it must not.

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