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Risking Your Life To Read
Description
Educated teachers, textbooks and supplies.
Question: What are we doing right in Afghanistan?
Julia Bolz: If I could use Afghanistan as an example, I'd love to tell you a little story about one of the girls in our communities. She's about nine years old. I'm going to call her Purvhana. And after the Taliban, for the first time the girls could go to school; but Purvhana's father wouldn't allow her to go. And day after day, Purvhana would watch her friends go into school but she had to stay home. One day Purvhana shows up at school.
And I remember one of the teachers approached her. They were very concerned because if Purvhana's father had learned about this, she might have been killed. And despite the fact that she could have been killed, or the risks involved, she continued to come to school. One day she doesn't show up, and everyone at the school was just sick about this because they were worried what would happen to this little girl. Well the story is this. She was with a family that had never gone to school before. They were all illiterate. Her father had received a letter from a relative in Pakistan. The father couldn't read it. Well this little nine year old girl steps up to the father and says, "Dad, I can read that letter."
And instead of killing her, he embraced her. And that story just had a ripple effect throughout our entire community. We went from having 420 girls to over 1,000. We went from having eight teachers to over 20. And then we went from having that one little school to multiple girl schools all over the region. And so for me, I'm just utterly convinced that it's not the U.S. military that's gonna make changes in these countries. It's these nine year old little girls who are so convicted about the importance of education that they're literally willing to risk their lives in order to make this work.
July 4, 2007
Question: What are we doing right in Afghanistan?
Julia Bolz: If I could use Afghanistan as an example, I'd love to tell you a little story about one of the girls in our communities. She's about nine years old. I'm going to call her Purvhana. And after the Taliban, for the first time the girls could go to school; but Purvhana's father wouldn't allow her to go. And day after day, Purvhana would watch her friends go into school but she had to stay home. One day Purvhana shows up at school.
And I remember one of the teachers approached her. They were very concerned because if Purvhana's father had learned about this, she might have been killed. And despite the fact that she could have been killed, or the risks involved, she continued to come to school. One day she doesn't show up, and everyone at the school was just sick about this because they were worried what would happen to this little girl. Well the story is this. She was with a family that had never gone to school before. They were all illiterate. Her father had received a letter from a relative in Pakistan. The father couldn't read it. Well this little nine year old girl steps up to the father and says, "Dad, I can read that letter."
And instead of killing her, he embraced her. And that story just had a ripple effect throughout our entire community. We went from having 420 girls to over 1,000. We went from having eight teachers to over 20. And then we went from having that one little school to multiple girl schools all over the region. And so for me, I'm just utterly convinced that it's not the U.S. military that's gonna make changes in these countries. It's these nine year old little girls who are so convicted about the importance of education that they're literally willing to risk their lives in order to make this work.
July 4, 2007
Question: What are we doing right in Afghanistan?
Julia Bolz: If I could use Afghanistan as an example, I'd love to tell you a little story about one of the girls in our communities. She's about nine years old. I'm going to call her Purvhana. And after the Taliban, for the first time the girls could go to school; but Purvhana's father wouldn't allow her to go. And day after day, Purvhana would watch her friends go into school but she had to stay home. One day Purvhana shows up at school.
And I remember one of the teachers approached her. They were very concerned because if Purvhana's father had learned about this, she might have been killed. And despite the fact that she could have been killed, or the risks involved, she continued to come to school. One day she doesn't show up, and everyone at the school was just sick about this because they were worried what would happen to this little girl. Well the story is this. She was with a family that had never gone to school before. They were all illiterate. Her father had received a letter from a relative in Pakistan. The father couldn't read it. Well this little nine year old girl steps up to the father and says, "Dad, I can read that letter."
And instead of killing her, he embraced her. And that story just had a ripple effect throughout our entire community. We went from having 420 girls to over 1,000. We went from having eight teachers to over 20. And then we went from having that one little school to multiple girl schools all over the region. And so for me, I'm just utterly convinced that it's not the U.S. military that's gonna make changes in these countries. It's these nine year old little girls who are so convicted about the importance of education that they're literally willing to risk their lives in order to make this work.
July 4, 2007
Question: What are we doing right in Afghanistan?
Julia Bolz: If I could use Afghanistan as an example, I'd love to tell you a little story about one of the girls in our communities. She's about nine years old. I'm going to call her Purvhana. And after the Taliban, for the first time the girls could go to school; but Purvhana's father wouldn't allow her to go. And day after day, Purvhana would watch her friends go into school but she had to stay home. One day Purvhana shows up at school.
And I remember one of the teachers approached her. They were very concerned because if Purvhana's father had learned about this, she might have been killed. And despite the fact that she could have been killed, or the risks involved, she continued to come to school. One day she doesn't show up, and everyone at the school was just sick about this because they were worried what would happen to this little girl. Well the story is this. She was with a family that had never gone to school before. They were all illiterate. Her father had received a letter from a relative in Pakistan. The father couldn't read it. Well this little nine year old girl steps up to the father and says, "Dad, I can read that letter."
And instead of killing her, he embraced her. And that story just had a ripple effect throughout our entire community. We went from having 420 girls to over 1,000. We went from having eight teachers to over 20. And then we went from having that one little school to multiple girl schools all over the region. And so for me, I'm just utterly convinced that it's not the U.S. military that's gonna make changes in these countries. It's these nine year old little girls who are so convicted about the importance of education that they're literally willing to risk their lives in order to make this work.
July 4, 2007
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