The Prague Post - In war-torn Sudan, a school offers a second chance at education

EUR -
AED 4.296862
AFN 80.13432
ALL 97.55034
AMD 448.921516
ANG 2.093605
AOA 1072.759497
ARS 1468.92409
AUD 1.77709
AWG 2.108669
AZN 1.991642
BAM 1.952068
BBD 2.363581
BDT 142.347822
BGN 1.957079
BHD 0.441028
BIF 3487.831052
BMD 1.169858
BND 1.497038
BOB 8.118477
BRL 6.471304
BSD 1.170562
BTN 100.245325
BWP 15.598175
BYN 3.830875
BYR 22929.219916
BZD 2.351404
CAD 1.598319
CDF 3376.210334
CHF 0.932301
CLF 0.028963
CLP 1111.434915
CNY 8.394085
CNH 8.397792
COP 4698.150366
CRC 590.371174
CUC 1.169858
CUP 31.001241
CVE 110.844287
CZK 24.637099
DJF 207.907527
DKK 7.460174
DOP 70.424632
DZD 152.102586
EGP 57.910979
ERN 17.547872
ETB 159.217577
FJD 2.620189
FKP 0.861206
GBP 0.861817
GEL 3.170527
GGP 0.861206
GHS 12.198185
GIP 0.861206
GMD 83.641127
GNF 10126.29191
GTQ 8.992805
GYD 244.911714
HKD 9.182744
HNL 30.826267
HRK 7.535757
HTG 153.586333
HUF 398.746258
IDR 18968.080189
ILS 3.880538
IMP 0.861206
INR 100.282288
IQD 1532.514188
IRR 49280.275111
ISK 142.792964
JEP 0.861206
JMD 187.072306
JOD 0.829436
JPY 171.08821
KES 151.495523
KGS 102.303613
KHR 4703.999644
KMF 492.510298
KPW 1052.860585
KRW 1604.729864
KWD 0.357637
KYD 0.975535
KZT 607.278845
LAK 25198.744658
LBP 104819.291214
LKR 351.647628
LRD 234.491657
LSL 20.811296
LTL 3.454287
LVL 0.707635
LYD 6.319015
MAD 10.52897
MDL 19.806129
MGA 5182.471634
MKD 61.537007
MMK 2456.177924
MNT 4196.053248
MOP 9.465202
MRU 46.477994
MUR 52.88898
MVR 18.018256
MWK 2031.45995
MXN 21.781821
MYR 4.968974
MZN 74.824198
NAD 20.811885
NGN 1790.929049
NIO 42.991905
NOK 11.792875
NPR 160.39232
NZD 1.939099
OMR 0.449808
PAB 1.170562
PEN 4.14656
PGK 4.840833
PHP 66.108362
PKR 332.826741
PLN 4.252142
PYG 9072.652528
QAR 4.258984
RON 5.07603
RSD 117.130907
RUB 86.627004
RWF 1677.5766
SAR 4.387431
SBD 9.753019
SCR 16.787763
SDG 702.506091
SEK 11.121491
SGD 1.497302
SHP 0.919325
SLE 26.322424
SLL 24531.344951
SOS 668.575785
SRD 43.715279
STD 24213.701956
SVC 10.242416
SYP 15210.414391
SZL 20.811767
THB 38.11152
TJS 11.325545
TMT 4.106202
TND 3.3984
TOP 2.739926
TRY 46.942195
TTD 7.948801
TWD 34.21039
TZS 3076.726899
UAH 48.99422
UGX 4194.978941
USD 1.169858
UYU 47.559064
UZS 14827.95222
VES 132.903253
VND 30550.260892
VUV 139.732377
WST 3.21827
XAF 654.705163
XAG 0.031615
XAU 0.000352
XCD 3.1616
XDR 0.813535
XOF 653.345202
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.930435
ZAR 20.75597
ZMK 10530.118441
ZMW 27.421568
ZWL 376.69385
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

In war-torn Sudan, a school offers a second chance at education
In war-torn Sudan, a school offers a second chance at education / Photo: Ebrahim Hamid - AFP/File

In war-torn Sudan, a school offers a second chance at education

In a worn-down classroom in eastern Sudan, men and women watch attentively from a wood bench as a teacher scribbles Arabic letters on a faded blackboard.

Text size:

Nodding approvingly in the corner is the school's 63-year-old founder Amna Mohamed Ahmed, known to most as "Amna Oor", which partly means lion in the Beja language of eastern Sudan.

She has spent the last three decades helping hundreds return to their education in Port Sudan, now the country's de facto capital.

The educator, who wears an orange headscarf wrapped neatly around her head, said she started the project in 1995 because of widespread illiteracy in her community.

"That's what pushed me to act. People wanted to learn -- if they didn't, they wouldn't have kept coming," she told AFP.

Ahmed's classes offer a second chance to those who missed out on formal education, particularly women who were denied schooling due to cultural or financial barriers.

- A fresh start -

For 39-year-old Nisreen Babiker, going back to school has been a long-held dream.

She left school in 2001 after marrying and taking on the responsibility of raising her younger siblings following her father's death.

"My siblings grew up and studied, and my children too," she said.

"I felt the urge to return to school. Even after all these years, it feels like I'm starting fresh," she told AFP.

Ahmed's school has also become a haven for those displaced by Sudan's ongoing conflict, which erupted in April 2023 between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who leads the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

The war has killed tens of thousands, uprooted over 12 million, and driven swathes of the country into hunger and famine.

Maria Adam is among those who fled their homes after war broke out. She arrived in Port Sudan seeking safety and a better future.

"When I arrived in Port Sudan, I heard about this place and joined," said the 28-year-old, noting that she dropped out of school when she was 11.

- Changing lives -

"I want to finish my education so I can help my children," Adam told AFP.

Sudan's education system has been shattered by the conflict, with the United Nations estimating that over 90 percent of the country's 19 million school-age children now have no access to formal learning.

Across the nation, most classrooms have been converted into shelters for displaced families.

Even before the war, a 2022 Save the Children analysis ranked Sudan among the countries most at risk of educational collapse.

But the determination to learn remains strong at the Port Sudan school, where many students have gone on to enter high school and some have even graduated from university.

In one corner of the classroom, a mother joins her young son in a lesson, hoping to reshape both their futures.

"To watch someone go from not knowing how to read or write to graduating from university, getting a job, supporting their family -- that is what keeps me going," Ahmed said.

"They go from being seen as a burden to becoming productive, educated members of society," she added.

N.Simek--TPP