Girls’ Education

Author: Jan-e-Alam Khaki
3 mins read

A RECENTLY held conference in Islamabad on the aforesaid subject is a valuable move to address the appalling condition of girls’ education in most Muslim societies. The conclusion of Clandon and his colleagues’ study of Muslim societies (2018) tells us what is obvious, that “At the global level, Muslim women are less educated and have wider gender gaps than all other religious groups. …” This is a predictable conclusion, given our perceptions and attitude towards education.

This is regrettable because we claim that education is an integral part of our faith. Yet it seems that the appeal to religion for literacy has not always helped. If it had, most Muslim countries should have been ahead of other nations. We do not hear non-Muslim communities begging parents to educate their girls. Education today is essential to survive in a competitive world. It is said that weakness invites aggression, and anybody today not armed with education is a very weak person indeed! If knowledge is power, the knowledgeable are invincible in a knowledge society.

I am inclined to think that often, the need and necessity of the times push people to seek education. I want to cite an example to demonstrate the point. Hunza valley was very backward till around the 1970s, girls’ schools being non-existent. But when the late Prince Karim Aga Khan started establishing girls’ schools (although boys’ schools existed since the 1940s) in the 1980s, that is when girls started attending schools.

A famous slogan inspired the local community. It had been given by Aga Khan III, grandfather of Prince Karim. He had urged his community that if a couple had two children — a girl and a boy — and if they were able to educate only one, educate the girl!

He had argued that if you educate the girl, she would educate the whole family. The boy can survive by doing even menial jobs, but an educated girl is an asset to the family. This guidance inspired the community but it took some time before schools were established due to the financial constraints of the time.

If you educate the girl, she’ll educate the whole family.

However, the actual impetus for girls’ education came when girls engaged in gainful employment after receiving higher education. When their family fortunes improved, others were inspired to send their girls to school despite cultural barriers. Today, there are many young women professionals, doctors, nurses, PhD scholars, police and public administrators in rural and urban Pakistan.

Many have even moved overseas for better opportunities. Today, education, in that area, is not necessarily only a religious duty but a basic human need to survive. They are now in an envious position as they live with dignity and respect with a better quality of life. The community provided an ‘enabling environment’, which provided stimulus for girls to excel.

Coming to the larger picture of girls’ education, the ‘enabling environment’ that is being talked about is largely missing. In fact, disabling factors abound in Pakistan. Studies show that some of the primary disabling factors includethe pathetic state of schools, lack of basic facilities, such as washrooms, absence of electricity and lack of security, especially for girls. Ansari and Ali (2024) of the Aga Khan University cite security of school buildings (no boundary wall), as one of the major factors standing in the way of girls’ education. In addition, lack of educational materials, boring and irrelevant curricula, shortage of teachers, bad teaching methods, corporal punishment, absence of libraries and other learning materials, are other disabling factors.

As an educator at a private university for many years, working with heads of schools and district education officers, I am inclined to believe that all stakeholders — not just the government — parents, community leaders, and particularly women, need to be involved in making sure they create an enabling environment for all children to go to, and come back from, school with dignity.

Apparently, in some tribal societies, girls’ education has been perceived as being against Islam, but to me, this is more a cultural and tribal pretext, rather than a religious issue. In most tribal or conservative societies, women are seen as less than human, and their education is perceived to be least rewarding, in fact, detrimental, to the tribal way of life. Yet those who move to urban societies start sending their children to educational institutions. Environment does make a difference.

In conclusion, the basic disabling factors cited above need to be addressed. We need to find more out-of-the-box solutions. Both top-down and bottom-up approaches must be tested. It is an unending struggle, but we have no other choice.

The writer is an educationist with an interest in the study of religion and philosophy.

(Opinion) Published in Dawn, February 14th, 2025

Previous Story

Poor Results Of Govt School Students Trigger Protests In GB

Next Story

Swabi Man Dies Of Suicide After Killing Four Children

Latest from Blog

Risky Experiment

The SBP’s recent decision to allow teenagers as young as 13 to open and operate bank accounts entirely on their own is meant to create an opportunity for children to gain financial literacy early and through hands-on experience. The new child account category is a fully functional digital wallet with…

Premature Babies Face Rising Risk of Preventable Blindness: Report

RAWALPINDI: Premature babies in Pakistan are losing their sight at rates far above global averages as a treatable eye condition, retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), continues to go undetected across large parts of the country, according to data compiled by Al-Shifa Trust Eye Hospital. The Al-Shifa Trust report stated that ROP…

Chaos Persists as Schools, Students Struggle to Secure Matric Admit Cards in Karachi

KARACHI: A day after the Board of Secondary Education Karachi (BSEK) postponed the matriculation exams for three days, the administrations of hundreds of schools, mostly privately run, are still scrambling to obtain admit cards for their thousands of students so they can learn about their examination centres. The matriculation exams, originally scheduled…

Death Toll Rises to 11 in Balochistan as Rain Lashes Much of Country

• Five of the victims die in Qila Abdullah, Kakar Khurasan • Flooding in Kabul River, urban centres likely • Widespread rain forecast across Punjab QUETTA / PESHAWAR / LAHORE: The death toll in rain-related incid­e­nts has reached 11, while over a do­­z­e­­n people have been injured in diff­e­­rent areas of Balochistan,…

Mpox Cases Rise in Sindh, Other Provinces

ISLAMABAD: A joint investigation into a suspected Mpox outbreak in Sindh’s Khairpur district has been launched by a high-level team of epidemiologists, laboratory scientists, and infection prevention experts. This comes as federal authorities express concern provincial government remains in denial despite laboratory confirmations and a growing number of cases among…
Go toTop