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Sadia’s Story - Lucky to be Alive

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Sadia, now 12 years old, grew up with six brothers and sisters in a wooden house in a quiet village in Myanmar. Tall, green trees bearing mangoes and jackfruits surrounded her home. Her mornings began with the chirping of birds and her parents’ loving voices.

One night, everything changed that meant Sadia had to leave her home behind. Gunshots pierced the air and her home was set on fire. Sadia and her family rushed into the forest to hide.

What Sadia witnessed over the next few days was more traumatic than most of us will experience, or even imagine in our lifetimes.
 

I feel lucky to be alive” she says, “Most children were not as lucky as I was.

As the family wandered through the jungle and crossed the roads between neighbouring villages, corpses lay strewn on the grounds while animals fed on them. Small hands and feet belonging to children lay by the sides of drains. Piles of burnt bodies – of the young men who were rounded and killed – lay in open fields.

Stories similar to Sadia’s echo many times over – for an estimated 500,000 Rohingya children who fled Myanmar and now live in the refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar. Unlike Sadia, thousands of these children arrived unaccompanied, ultimately losing both parents while trying to flee. More than 6,000 households in the camps are headed by a child. Without access to formal education, these half a million children are at risk of becoming a lost generation.

Today, Sadia lives in a shelter with her family, she admits it is much smaller than her previous home, but she feels much safer there. She misses her friends from her previous school back in Myanmar, but she has also made new friends in Bangladesh.

Sadia loves the many stories she gets to hear, apart from the usual school lessons. Storytelling sessions are her favourite; she also loves reciting traditional Burmese rhymes with her friends. Sadia learning how to better communicate and socialise with everyone around her. She also learns about hygiene – how to wash her hands properly before eating and to always put her sandals on before going to the washroom.
 

I always tell my parents what I am learning every day after I go home,” 
Sadia says excitedly.
 

Sadia is a student at EAC and BRAC’s learning centre in Camp 16. The centres are safe spaces where women run sessions – a language instructor from the Rohingya community and a teacher from the host community.   “I lost my child trying to flee from Myanmar,” says Sadia’s language instructor.

All of my students are my children now. I want to give them hope and prepare them for whatever life brings.

The learning centre that Sadia attends focuses on early grade learning, basic literacy, numeracy, life-saving information, and psychosocial support and life skills for children aged 4-14 years.

تأثير

"لن تتغلب الإنسانية على التحديات الهائلة التي تواجهها إلا إذا ضمنا حصول الأطفال على التعليم الجيد الذي يؤهلهم للقيام بدورهم في العالم الحديث." - صاحبة السمو الشيخة موزا بنت ناصر

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