Provide Education For Rohingya refugees
By Ziaur Rahman
Since 2017, over a million Rohingya refugees were forced to leave their homes due to the ongoing genocide in Myanmar. Unprecedented levels of forced displacement have caused global migration and a refugee crisis in several countries, but world leaders have failed to come up with any long-term solutions. Most Rohingya refugees have found themselves in limbo for years, their rights are denied in their host countries, and they are unable to become self-sufficient or more importantly, rebuild their lives.
Since 2017, over a million Rohingya refugees were forced to leave their homes due to the ongoing genocide in Myanmar. Unprecedented levels of forced displacement have caused global migration and a refugee crisis in several countries, but world leaders have failed to come up with any long-term solutions. Most Rohingya refugees have found themselves in limbo for years, their rights are denied in their host countries, and they are unable to become self-sufficient or more importantly, rebuild their lives.
A
school is a safe place where children learn, play and grow - basic
necessities for any child growing up, but this is especially
important for those that are thousands of miles away from their homes
and have seen the horrors of war.
In
1996, I was in a refugee camp in Bangladesh after having escaped the
horrors of the killings in Myanmar. I started studying in
community school and madrasa in Dhumdomia, Teknaf. I was very happy
on my first day at school with a broken chalk and slate. The school
had no roof but nevertheless, it still felt like I was learning
something. In the refugee camps, life was difficult and tough.
Everyone taught me something and education was about survival.
Fortunately, I was able to learn English through a private academy
while I was there.
WFP
and UNHCR supplied biscuits for us, and most of us actually came to
school to receive a pack of 6 or 12 biscuits a day. It was not
comparable to a plate of rice, but believe me, it was a real blessing
in comparison to nothing at all. With the terrible life conditions,
most Rohingyas did not receive a proper education in the refugee
camps in Bangladesh as survival and well being were the priorities.
I
smiled when I saw this picture that went viral a few weeks ago. Every
day I came to the Learning Centers/Schools, WFP biscuits were
available. Unfortunately, there were no textbooks nor an education
system from the Bangladesh government.
According
to the UN, education is the key that will allow many other
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to be achieved. When people are
able to get quality education, they can break away from the cycle of
poverty. Education, therefore, helps to reduce inequalities. It also
empowers people everywhere to live more fulfilling and sustainable
lives without relying on handouts and aid. Education will improve the
child’s confidence. It provides the child with essential and
necessary life skills. Education will enable the child to contribute
to the country’s economy when he or she becomes an adult.
It
will also make the child less likely to be cheated by other people.
Once the child reaches adulthood, there will be some form of respect
for him or her from society.
If
countries don’t allow a refugee child to get an education,
indirectly they’re making the whole community a burden to the
government. If they let refugee children study then they can get
better jobs and won’t have to depend on government money to do
anything. Refugees also won’t have to depend on UNHCR or other NGOs
for financial assistance.
However,
years have gone by and yet there is no progress for the education of
refugees. Yet education is perhaps the only way that refugees can
improve their lives and then contribute back to the countries that
host them. If you are reading this, I would like to make a plea to
you to raise your voice to provide quality education for refugees
everywhere, complete with a curriculum system where at the end
of it, students will receive a qualification.
I
cannot accept that my fellow refugee brothers and sisters will go
through what I did. All we ask for is safety, freedom and
education so that we can contribute to our host country and this
world. Please spend those millions to provide proper education for
refugees. Years have gone by and all the funding has not made our
situation any better. Our lives are being ruined. So stop wasting our
lives. Stop wasting the lives of successive generations!
Someone
wrote: "Refugees need practical and fast paths to integrate into
new societies. This begins with quality education." But
education is also a human right. The only way to get us out of the
clutches of poverty is through education. Education is the key for
refugees to build their futures enabling us to become journalists,
doctors, lawyers, pilots, engineers, human rights advocates,
diplomats and politicians. This will then change the future of our
families, communities and our country and then the world.
We
Rohingya, will never forget those who have given us the opportunities
to reach our potential.