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【113】罗辛亚人为继续在难民营接受教育而奋斗

littleflute 漂泊者乐园 2021-10-05

EDUCATION

Rohingya Struggle to Continue Their Education in Refugee Camps

March 26, 2019

Rohingya refugee children leave school after a morning of classes in Shamplapur refugee camp in Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, March 26, 2018. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne

One morning in January, Kefayat Ullah walked to his school in southern Bangladesh, just as he had done most days over the past six years.

Kefayat had always been one of the top students in his class. But on this day, the 16-year-old was told he had been expelled. The school’s headmaster told him that he and more than 60 of his classmates were no longer permitted to attend school.

The reason? A government investigation had identified them as Rohingya refugees.

“We went back home crying,” Kefayat said.



Kefayat Ullah, a Rohingya boy who was expelled from Leda High School for being a Rohingya, studies in his shelter in Leda camp in Teknaf, Bangladesh, March 5, 2019. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain


Rohingya are mostly stateless Muslims from neighboring Myanmar, also known as Burma. More than 730,000 Rohingya fled across the border after Myanmar’s military launched an offensive against suspected rebels in late 2017. The United Nations has said the violence was carried out with “genocidal intent.”

Thousands of children, like Kefayat, were born in Bangladesh after their parents fled earlier waves of violence in Myanmar.

For years, schools in Bangladesh quietly welcomed Rohingya, who live along the southern coast in the world’s largest refugee settlement.

But the growing number of arrivals has tested Bangladesh’s government. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has said the country is not able to fully welcome all of the refugees.

Myanmar has said it is ready to welcome back the refugees. However, the country from which they fled still is dealing with ethnic tensions and violence. The United Nations says conditions are not right for them to return.

'Hungry for education'

In some countries, governments permit refugees to study in local schools or permit groups operating in the camps to teach the national curriculum.

But Bangladesh has not recognized the majority of the Rohingya as refugees. And it does not give Bangladeshi birth certificates to children born in the camps.

The government has also prevented centers in the camps from teaching Bangladesh’s education curriculum, says the U.N. children’s agency, UNICEF.

The recent school expulsions mean that hundreds of thousands of Rohingya may miss out on critical years of education.


Yasmin, a Rohingya girl who was expelled from Leda High School for being a Rohingya, helps her younger sister to study in Leda camp in Teknaf, Bangladesh, March 5, 2019. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain



“Many students are depressed and frustrated,” said one 21-year-old. He asked not to be named because he was continuing to pass as Bangladeshi so he could go to university.

The young man added, “Yes, we are somehow pretending to be Bangladeshi students. Yes, we have got some education. But now, where will we go? The world should think about this: if we can’t study, our future will be damaged. We are hungry for education.”

Jamal Uddin is headmaster of Leda High School, where Kefayat was once a student. He said of the decision to expel Rohingya, “We are very sorry and disappointed.” He added, “The government is providing everything for the Rohingya -- why not education?”

But other people support the decision. They include the school’s founder, Kamal Uddin Ahmed. He said the arrival of the Rohingya has created big problems for the local community. Some have blamed Rohingya for bringing drugs and crimes to Bangladesh.

“How do you think I feel? We don’t mind the Rohingya, but we mind our lives,” Kamal said.

In January, the head of Bangladesh’s Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commission wrote to school headmasters in and around the city of Cox’s Bazar.

In the letter, commission chief Abul Kalam noted, “It has been seen the trend of Rohingya children’s participation in getting education has been increasing.” He also noted that some Rohingya were using false identity documents so they could go to school.

Abul said, “It is advised to monitor strictly so that no Rohingya children can take education outside the camps or elsewhere in Bangladesh.”

He told the Reuters news agency that Rohingya were getting an education from learning centers operating within the camps.

Secret studying

But many children and their parents describe the learning centers that international agencies operate as offering mostly unstructured learning and playtime.

A temporary school run by Rohingya volunteer teachers opened in February. However, the lead teacher said they had no official permission to operate.

Karen Reidy is a communications officer at UNICEF, which leads education programming in the camps. She said her group was working on making other countries’ curriculums into a “learning framework” for refugee children.


Kefayat Ullah, a Rohingya boy who was expelled from Leda High School for being a Rohingya, poses for a picture in front of his shelter in Leda camp in Teknaf, Bangladesh, March 5, 2019. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain



“There’s a risk in the camps that we will see a lost generation of children if we don’t manage to catch them with education, with skills and training at this critical point in their lives,” she said.

At the Nayapara camp, Kefayat and other expelled students tell stories from their years of secret study in Bangladeshi schools. Some of their classmates were cruel to them, said Kefayat.

“They used the word ‘Rohingya’, ‘Burma’ to tease us,” he said. “Nevertheless, we were happy. We need education.”

Kefayat dreamed of completing his education and becoming a reporter “to help our community,” he said. Now, he watches his onetime Bangladeshi classmates travel to and from class in their clean white clothes.


Bangladeshi students from the class where Rohingya students were expelled by the authorities are seen at Leda high school, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, February 9, 2019. Picture taken February 9, 2019. REUTERS/Jiraporn Kuhakan



“We feel sad when we see the local students studying in a nice place, quietly,” he said. “Now we are always worried and thinking – what will we do?”

I’m Ashley Thompson.

And I'm Jonathan Evans.

The Reuters news agency reported this story. Ashley Thompson adapted it for VOA Learning English. George Grow was the editor.

Words in This Story

headmaster - n. the person who is head of a school

intent - n. an aim or purpose

curriculum - n. the courses that are taught by a school, college, etc.

certificate - n. a document that is official proof that something has happened

frustrated - adj. very angry, discouraged, or upset because of being unable to do or complete something

pretend - v. to act as if something is true when it is not true

trend - n. a general direction of change

monitor - v. to watch, observe, listen to, or check (something) for a special purpose over a period of time

strictly - adv. used to describe a command, rule, etc., that must be obeyed

framework - n. the basic structure of something



dir:

VOA英语慢速听力 88 篇(教育类2018小结):【目录9】


:

【112】特朗普签署命令将学院“言论自由”与联邦援助组织联系起来

【111】School Science Lessons Targeted by Climate Change Doubters

【110】学生、学校对2500万美元的大学招生骗局的反应

【109】好莱坞明星,主管大学录取的高管被罚

【108】State Funding, Private Donations to US Colleges Increasing

【107】Study:美国多数白人学校比非白人学校多得到230亿美元

【106】The Rise of Colleges without Classes or Professors

【105】Can Language Learning Happen During Sleep?

【104】States Look to Increase Governance of Struggling Colleges

【103】大学兄弟会或女生联谊会损害学生的表现

【102】Wikitongues Seeks to Save World’s Dying Languages

【101】高校教材由印刷走向数字化

【100】滑雪冠军瞄准常春藤联盟教育

【99】美国大学很难留住校长

【98】研究表明:说“父母语”有助于婴儿的语言学习

【97】用艺术传授社交和情感技能

【96】大学集团致力于收集访问、完成的数据

【95】作为学校学习工具的电子游戏

【94】美国博士学位可能会失去吸引力

【93】美国研究:高中毕业生有很多好工作

【92】多睡有助于大学生在课堂上的学习

【91】教育 Award-Winning 'Dreamer' Fears He Cannot Return to US

【90】What Does the Future Hold for Liberal Arts Graduates?

【89】教育 US High School Students Learn Construction by ...

【88】College Admissions: Searching for Financial Support

【87】教育  Woman Reaches Lifelong Goal of College Degree at 84

【86】US Education Secretary’s Policy Changes Had Mixed ...

【85】教育 Study:Class Size Has Only Minor Effect on Student Results

【84】Mexican President Orders End to Disputed Education Reforms

【83】教育: Number of US Students Studying Abroad Continues to Grow

【82】教育Microsoft: US Schools Short on Computer Science Training

【81】教育: Study: Most US College Administrators Are Liberal

【80】教育‘Moana' Hawaiian Version Seeks to Save Endangered Language

【79】教育: US Considers New Restrictions on Chinese Students

【78】教育:Groups, Colleges to Help Former Students Finish...

【77】教育: Tips for Writing: ‘They Say, I Say’

【76】教育:提高演讲技巧的三条小贴士

【75】教育: 用肢体语言提高你的演讲能力

【74】教育: 成功的辩论就像建造一座房子

【73】教育:规划演示文稿的五个技巧

【72】美国农村学校只有一名学生,一名教师

【71】教育:Website Helps College Students Deal with Mental...

【70】教育US Education Secretary Proposes New Rules on Sexual...

【69】教育: Former New York Mayor Gives $1.8 Billion to Johns...

【68】教育US College IT Services Face Serious Spending Limits,...

【67】教育:Number of International Students Coming to US...

【66】教育US National Average Data Removed from ‘College Scorecard’

【65】教育:Yemeni Teacher Opens Home to 700 Students

【64】教育US Universities Reconsider Ties with Saudi Arabia

【63】教育:Number of English Learners in US Schools Keeps Rising

【62】教育 Non-degree Programs May Not Serve Men and Women Equally

【61】教育:Language Study: Babies Learn Better with Others

【60】教育Students Win Legal Action against US Education Department

【59】教育:Harvard Accused of Discriminating Against Asian-Americans

*【58】教育:US Public Colleges Fail to Serve Black Students, Study..

【57】教育:Study: Nearly 10 Percent of US Airbnb Hosts Are Teachers

【56】教育:'Free College' Programs May Not Help Neediest Students

 

【55】教育:Puerto Rico Students Still Suffer Effects of...

【54】教育: Does Using Technology in the Classroom Help College...

【53】教育:More US Schools Teaching Skills to Recognize False News

【52】教育:Report: Long Writing Assignments Now Less Common at...

【51】教育:UN: Half of Young Teenagers Face Violence or Bullying...

【50】教育:Parents, Leaders Work to End 'Hazing' at US Colleges

【49】教育:American Indian Charter School Wins Approval in Oklahoma

【48】教育:More International College Students Staying to Work in US

【47】教育:Gates Foundation Announces $92 Million Assistance to...

【46】教育:New English Tests Beyond TOEFL, IELTS

【45】教育:EDUCATION  Report: Teachers Find Technology Mostly...

【44】教育:  Study Suggests Many College Graduates are ...

【43】教育: Study Finds Support for Charter Schools Growing in US

【42】教育: Many US States Struggle with Teacher Shortages

【41】教育:Study: Many Students Who Quit College Are Close to...

【40】教育:US University Puts Electronic Assistants in All ...

【39】教育: College Admissions: Making the Decision to Transfer

【38】教育:Watch Out for English and German ‘Falsche Freunde’

【37】What Do Colleges Want?

【36】Some US Colleges Offer Full Scholarships to Gamers

【35】Some Colleges Ask for Part of Future Salary Instead of Loans

教育【34】250 Years Might Return to AP World History Course After..

教育【33】 Some US Colleges Let Students Bring Animals to School

教育【32】More US Schools Offering International Baccalaureate...

教育【31】College Admissions: Easing the Process through Open...

教育【30】US to Stop Urging Schools to Consider Race in Admissions

教育【29】US Educators Debate Proposal to Cut Thousands of Years...

教育【28】Sharing Your Gifts with the World at the University of...

教育【27】Chinese Professor Removed after Reports from ...

教育【26】Reaching for Perfection at the University of Nevada...

【25】Oxford English Dictionary Adds ‘Brencheese,’ ‘Spoiler Alert’

教育【24】 Enjoying the Familiar and Unfamiliar at Brigham Young...

教育【23】Norwegian Study: IQ Scores Dropped for Decades

教育【22】Adapting to Change at the University of New Mexico

教育【21】E-Cigarette Sellers Offer Financial Aid to Students

教育【20】Getting the Most from Every Moment at the University of..

*教育【19】Study Finds Hot Classrooms Hurt Learning

教育【18】Forming a Second Family at Mesa Community College

教育【17】Pakistan ‘Street Schools’ Open to Poor Kids, Parents

教育【16】Graduation Speeches Discuss World Problems, Look for...

教育【15】News Literacy Lesson 6: News and Social Media

教育【14】 News Literacy Lesson 5: Quality of News Reports

教育【13】 News Literacy Lesson 4: Balance, Fairness

教育【12】News Literacy Lesson 3: Establishing the Truth

教育【11】News Literacy Lesson 2: Verification, Independence, ...

教育【10】It's Important to Know Your 'False Friends' in English...

教育【9】News Literacy Lesson 1: Real News vs. Fake News

教育【8】News Literacy Introduction: News Through Time

教育【7】College Admissions: Showing Your Best Side on Social Media

教育【6】Study: US Job Program for Foreign Students Greatly Expands

教育【5】Should SAT and ACT Test Results Be Optional in ...

教育【4】US Graduation: Are Today’s High School Students Prepared?

教育【3】Colleges Admissions: Finishing as Strongly as You Start

【2】Study Finds Africans Among Best Educated US Immigrants

教育【1】American Colleges Want More Rural Students



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