This is the VOA Special English Development Report.
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| Sakena Yacoobi leading an Afghan Institute of Learning workshop |
When
Sakena Yacoobi was a child in Herat , Afghanistan, she saw many women suffer. They
had no education and little or no medical care. Many died in childbirth.In
the nineteen seventies she came to the United States. She became a professor
and health consultant. But in nineteen ninety-two, she visited Afghan refugee
camps in Pakistan. What she saw persuaded her to return to her homeland.
In
nineteen ninety-five she started the Afghan Institute of Learning. The
organization began by serving Afghan women and girls in the camps in neighboring
Pakistan.
At
that time, the Taliban controlled most of Afghanistan. The rulers would not let
girls go to school. Sakena Yacoobi risked her life to set up eighty secret
schools in Afghan homes. About three thousand girls attended these schools.
American-led forces ousted the Taliban from power in
late two thousand one, after the terrorist attacks on the United States.
Today Sakena Yacoobi says her organization avoids the
most dangerous provinces. It operates education and health centers and
traveling clinics. The institute has trained more than fifteen thousand
teachers and has provided health education for half a million women. Seventy
percent of its four hundred fifty staff members are women.
The group invites men as well as women to discussions on
the Koran's teachings about the equality of the sexes.
In two thousand
three, to educate women, the institute established Gawhar Shad University in
Peshawar, Pakistan. The university currently has about one hundred eighty
students. Around the same number already have graduated. The university offers
degrees in education, business, nursing, health education, math and computer
science.
Each year, the Afghan Institute of Learning serves about
three hundred fifty thousand women and children in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Sakena
Yacoobi has received many awards, including this year's two hundred fifty
thousand dollar Henry R. Kravis Prize in Leadership. In accepting the award from
Claremont McKenna College in California, she said: "Every day, I see the
impact of education, and that's the force that keeps me going on."
And that's the VOA Special English
Development Report, written by Jerilyn Watson, with reporting by Carolyn Weaver.