The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Teachers in Iraq’s Mosul learn to cope with traumatise­d pupils

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MOSUL, Iraq: On a classroom whiteboard in the battered city of Mosul the words ‘rediscover­ing how to smile’ outline the heartbreak­ing task of Iraqi teachers striving to heal their students’ mental scars after brutal Islamic State group rule.

Dozens of Iraqi teachers — many battling trauma themselves — have gathered at a university, where instructor Nazem Shaker seeks to guide them in helping children still struggling to cope months after IS was driven from the devastated city.

Shaker has drawn a ‘problem tree’ on the board whose roots are a litany of anguish: ‘relatives killed’, ‘witnessing beheadings’, ‘destructio­n’ and ‘poverty’.

He hopes that through a programme of games, mime and sport, teachers will be better able to help students reach the goals outlined in the top branches of his diagram, where ‘hope’ and ‘optimism’ join the aspiration to smile again.

“How to live together and eradicate violence,” he says are key lessons that have to be passed on.

The teachers must help show students how to reconstruc­t their lives and escape the stress, pressures and bad memories that haunt them, he adds.

It is not just the years of IS rule that haunt the waking lives and sleeping hours of the children in Iraq’s second city.

The ferocious nine months of urban combat that saw Iraqi troops force out the jihadists in July with the help of airstrikes by a US-led coalition have left deep marks — both physical and mental.

School headmaster Noamat Sultan encounters the destructiv­e impact of the psychologi­cal trauma daily.

“One of our students was very aggressive and kept on picking fights with his classmates,” he tells AFP.

“We had a long discussion with him and discovered that his father and brother had been killed recently in an explosion.”

With the help of the boy’s older brother and more attention from teachers, he has gradually been coaxed back to himself.

“We have already managed to convince him not to drop out of school,” said father-of-eight Sultan.

Physical education teacher Rasha Ryadh has seen the heavy toll from the “psychologi­cal pressures caused by seeing executions, deaths, explosions and the loss of loved ones”, but is sure the students can recover.

“They are ready to respond positively to the rehabilita­tion programmes because they want to banish the thoughts and memories that drag them back to the period of Islamic State group rule,” she says. — AFP

 ??  ?? Iraqi children walk to school in the battered city of Mosul on Dec 27, 2017.
Iraqi children walk to school in the battered city of Mosul on Dec 27, 2017.

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