‘Feed and read’ helps Nigerian boys at risk of joining Boko Haram

Children in conflicts, Education in emergencies


Nigerian students taking part in the Feed and Read programme Pictures: American University of Nigeria Foundation

For the听first time in his life, 17-year-old Muhammed Sani can identify听the letters of the English alphabet and read simple sentences in听English, such as: 国产视频淚 want to eat国产视频 and 国产视频淚 want to go home国产视频.

He can also work out simple mathematical sums. All this he has learnt over the past six months of attending the 国产视频淔eed and Read国产视频 programme of the American University of Nigeria (AUN) in the northeastern Nigerian city of Yola.

国产视频淭hey also teach us how to be clean and neat,国产视频 he said.

Before joining the programme, launched last year, Muhammed divided his time between attending Koranic school and begging for alms on the streets of Yola.

He is one of northern Nigeria国产视频檚 国产视频渁lmajiri国产视频, young boys who are seen as vulnerable to recruitment by Boko Haram militants, whose six-year insurgency in northern Nigeria has killed thousands and displaced more than two million people.

Almajiri is the Arabic term for someone who leaves home in search of knowledge in Islam. The ancient tradition sees families send their sons thousands of miles from home to boarding schools across northern Nigeria, where they are left in the care of an Islamic scholar or 国产视频淢alam国产视频.

Over time, the system became overwhelmed and neglected. Unable to cope, many Malams began sending their wards on to the streets to beg for their upkeep, leaving them vulnerable to destitution, trafficking and other abuse.

They are also ideal recruits for the Islamist armed group Boko Haram. According to Nigerian government estimates, there are at least 10 million almajiri children in the northern region.

A few years ago, when AUN President Margee Ensign decided to do more than give money and food to the many young boys who thronged around her at the university国产视频檚 gates, she faced opposition.

国产视频淭he rumour went round that I was trying to convert the boys to Christianity,国产视频 she said, leading her to abandon plans for the university to offer the almajiri some form of free education.

But with the rise of the Boko Haram insurgency and the university国产视频檚 involvement in caring for those displaced by the conflict, Ensign once again felt a strong need to help the boys. This time, she decided to do things differently.

国产视频淲e invited the Imams and Malams to campus and explained what we wanted to do,国产视频 she said.

The 国产视频淔eed and Read国产视频 programme is careful not to interfere in any way with the children国产视频檚 religion or study of the Koran.

The boys attend koranic classes in the daytime, then meet under canopies at the university国产视频檚 car park in the evenings, for their lessons in basic English and mathematics.

A few weeks ago, a stranger came to a Yola market on a Sunday and passed out naira to the poor children who beg there国产视频.
Posted by American University of Nigeria Foundation on听Tuesday, 1 December 2015

They are also taught vocational and trade skills. Whenever it is time for prayers, everything stops and the children pray. They are also fed nutritious meals after each day国产视频檚 lessons.

The Malams, meanwhile, are given a regular stipend, so they do not suffer any loss of income from the boys not begging on the streets.

国产视频淎t the beginning, the Malams actually came with their boys to ensure they knew exactly what we were doing,国产视频 Ensign said.

The 200 boys in the scheme are grouped according to age and time of enrolment, with the curriculum expanding as the boys advance. AUN students teach the classes, as part of their own assessment.

国产视频淭he reason why we have been successful in this programme is because we work directly with the Malams,国产视频 said Joseph Oladimeji, the programme国产视频檚 coordinator.

One of the aims of the programme is to encourage people to stop referring to the boys as almajiri, a word that tends to have negative connotations.

国产视频淲e want them to be known as just boys,国产视频 he said.

The boys themselves are encouraged to stop seeing themselves as misfits.

Instead of the typical plastic alms bowl given to them by their Malams, which, says Oladimeji, is a symbol of their itinerant beggar lifestyle, they are given shiny new bowls and cutlery which they leave behind after eating their free meals.

The boys are also taught the basics of personal hygiene. They are regularly issued bars of soap and any child who arrives unwashed or with dirty clothes is denied his food ration for the day.

国产视频淲e want to remove that beggar mentality from them,国产视频 he said.

At first Ensign provided funds for 国产视频淔eed and Read国产视频 from her own pocket, but as the programme has expanded, the university has begun appealing to international donors through the AUN Foundation, a non-profit based in the United States.

Recently, the university received funding from the Irish government, with which it launched a 国产视频淔eed and Read国产视频 programme for girls in February 2016.

This will target girls who are increasingly taking to the streets, having been orphaned or displaced from their homes by Boko Haram violence.听

The Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, covers humanitarian news, women国产视频檚 rights, corruption and climate change.


More news

See all news