by David Danso-Amoako
We may take our education for granted, but in other countries
you could be killed for seeking an education. That’s how powerful it is.
In
history, by not educating others, the rich man would have gained more money
because others could not reason against him or her. This is mainly shown in
religion when the clergy would tell poor people that, in order to have your sins forgiven, you have to pay your way into heaven by using pardons which you paid for. The
money paid for a pardon would be used as profits mainly for the rich clergy
bishops and abbots. The Bible was written in Latin, so the uneducated poor could
not understand it and were easily duped by the rich people.
A current example of paying the ultimate price for education
was seen last week in Pakistan, where 132 innocent children were massacred
because they chose to go to school and receive an education. The reason the
Taliban gave for this massacre was, in one word, 'vengeance'. They justified their
actions by saying this was to avenge the death of the children by the Pakistani
army. World leaders have truly condemned the act of violence committed in this
military school, the attendants mainly children of the soldiers.
However, this threat
isn’t isolated. In Nigeria, over 200
girls in school in Chibok were kidnapped in April by Boko Haram, which means in
English “Western education is forbidden”. This caused the rise of the hashtag
Bring Back Our Girls, a campaign trying to bring them back alive. Some in the
school already knew this was going to happen, so took their children away from
school. But those children who didn’t know this were kidnapped and forced to change to Islamic beliefs. While a few of the girls have
managed to escape, the fate of the majority remains unknown.
But if you think we
have been defeated in our cause for education, look no further than Malala
Yousafzai, who survived, with help from the UK, a bullet to the head from the
Taliban and is now the driving inspiration for others to go to school in
dangerous areas like Afghanistan and Pakistan. This year, she has been awarded a Nobel peace
prize for her efforts. On her eleventh birthday she gave an
inspirational speech in which she said “the pen and the book are our best
weapons.”
If we give the poorest countries education for their
children, we will not only be giving them a chance in life, but we will help
the country because we are giving them in essence home-grown talent. This will
therefore help them boost their economy and the employment rate.
So what is being done about the education problem?
Well,
UNICEF has built schools in poor
villages for pupils to go to school and have an education so they will fare just as well as we do in the
future. Richer schools are sponsors of these poorer schools so that way they
can pay the teachers who work in the schools. We can also help build schools
that will be in use after a short period of time. But even after these changes
in poorer countries there will always be the problem of the safety of schooling
in war torn areas.
Why am I saying this? It is because as we go into the
festive season, school may seem so distant from our minds. So, when this year
is finished, we know that we have done something very remarkable compared to
others. We have gone to school and we have received an education. We must now
help others who are in great need of going to school. By giving the chance for
a child to go to school you are not just educating that child, you are
educating their children and if we all do it we will educate a generation.
May you all have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
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