"THE WOMEN OF AFGHANISTAN"
YOUTH UPDATE!
THE AFGHAN YOUTH STAT NEWS:
Kunduz in northern Afghanistan is the country's fifth largest city and home to more than 300,000 people.
It was once a Taliban stronghold where women were deprived of their basic rights and education for girls was prohibited.
Today, particularly in towns and cities, women can go outside without
their husbands or fathers, they can work, and girls can attend school
and even university.
But with a new wave of privately run madrasas - or religious schools -
being opened across the country, there is a growing feeling among
women's rights groups that these freedoms are again under threat.
There are now 1,300 unregistered madrasas in Afghanistan, where children are given only religious teaching.
This is increasing fears among those involved in mainstream education.
Arguably the most controversial of these madrasas is Ashraf-ul
Madares in Kunduz, founded by two local senior clerics, where 6,000
girls study full time.
The girls attend the madrasa solely to study the Quran and the
teachings of the prophet Mohammed. They are taught by male teachers, who
they are forbidden from meeting face-to-face, and full hijab must be
worn.
In The Girls of the Taliban, our cameras gain unprecedented
access to film inside this madrasa, to meet with the girls and their
families and to question the men behind it.
Read more: http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/specialseries/2014/12/girls-taliban-2014121716718177928.html
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