The ‘Malala of Syria’
A Syrian girl, Mezon Almellehan, is being hailed as the ‘Syrian Malala Yousefzai’, the young Nobel Peace Prize-winning Pakistani girl that won international acclaim for her outspoken campaign to empower girls and women around the world.
The Huffington Post writes:
After fleeing the horrors of her country’s bloody civil war, Mezon Almellehan and her family made their way to Jordan where they faced a slew of new struggles, but the 16-year-old’s resolve has remained unshaken.
The committed teen believes education is her ticket out of this fraught situation and she works to impress this ideal on the other girls in her Azraq refugee camp.
Each morning, Almellehan ventures from tent to tent urging her neighbors to go to school, the Malala Fund, a group that fosters education opportunities worldwide, wrote in a recent blog post.
“We have the right to attend school and I feel I have a responsibility towards the community,” Almellehan told the human rights organization “As a girl, I can find friendly ways to convince a girl to continue with her studies.”
Almellehan’s sentiment mirrors her alter ego’s advocacy mission.
After getting shot in the head by the Taliban while on her way home from school in Pakistan in 2012, Malala Yousafzai’s commitment to education only grew stronger. Since then, the Nobel Peace Prize winner has dedicated her life’s work to bringing education to children worldwide who have been deprived of that basic right.
She wrote a memoir about her experience and helped found her eponymous fund to propel her work forward.
Yousafzai has played an indispensable role in helping to inspire Almellehan.
The two met last year when Yousafzai visited the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan, where Almellehan was living at the time. About 25,000 school-age Syrian refugees live in the camp, and Almellehan served as one of the school’s “ambassadors,” according to the UN Refugee Agency.
“To me, Malala is a big hero because she suffered a lot and she almost died of her injury,” Almellehan said, according to the Malala Fund. “For me, as a refugee, this means I do not have to give up hope, which means I can get an education.”
Having a vocal advocate engaged in the camps is particularly critical in Jordan where education rates have remained concernedly low among Syrian refugee children.
The number of Syrian children in Jordan enrolled in formal education increased slightly last year to 20,300, according to a UNHCR study. That’s 9 percentage points higher from 2013.
Still, over half of that demographic has missed some schooling. Once children miss three years of lessons, they are no longer permitted to participate in Jordan’s education formal education system.
So impressed with Almellehan’s passion, Yousafzai invited her friend to attend the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony with her in Norway in December, along with three other young advocates, Time reported.
While Almellehan faces a number of overwhelming obstacles, including not having electricity in school and seeing other girls pressured to get married young, she’s undeterred.
“I want to be a journalist,” she told the Malala Fund. “My future, I think it will be very nice.”
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