The Star Malaysia - Star2

All aboard the story book bus

This bright blue vehicle travels around Kabul, stuffed with words for young and old, opening the door to literacy and hope for a better future.

- By ZABIHULLAH NOORI

UNDETERRED by the risk of suicide bombers, 25-year-old Freshta Karim travels around Afghanista­n’s troubled capital every day in a big, blue bus to share the magic of reading with children.

After graduating from Britain’s prestigiou­s University of Oxford, she set up Kabul’s first mobile library to let some of Afghanista­n’s 3.5 million out-of-school children – mostly girls – listen to stories and pore over picture books.

“When I was a child, I did not have the opportunit­y to go to a library and read the storybooks I wanted to read,” she says in a phone interview from Kabul.

“My goal is to enable them not only to think critically, but also to be able to question the wrongdoing they see.” Afghanista­n has one of the world’s lowest literacy rates, with only three in 10 adults able to read, according to the United Nations cultural agency, Unesco.

The Taliban have been waging an insurgency to overthrow Kabul’s Western-backed government since their 2001 ouster and control large parts of the country.

While the education system has made significan­t gains since the Taliban era – when girls were excluded from formal education altogether – worsening security has forced many school closures.

After decades of war, more than four in 10 Afghan children are not in school, government data shows, with many working to support their families.

Karim set up the Charmaghz – meaning walnut in Dari – mobile library with three friends in January in a bus rented from the

government, and painted it with colourful symbols, stars, balloons and footprints to attract children.

They installed bookshelve­s above the windows and chairs and desks for children and adults to sit and read – a luxury in a country where four in 10 schools do not even have a building, according to Human Rights Watch.

A sign over the windscreen reads

“4 Maghz”, or four minds, to spark the interest of passers-by.

“We intentiona­lly did it to provoke the people’s thought – whether we mean a walnut or four minds,” says Karim, who went to school as a refugee in Pakistan and then won scholarshi­ps to study abroad.

Residents of Kabul have welcomed the library on wheels, which stops for three or four hours at a time in different parts of the city so that children can climb on board to read hundreds of fiction and nonfiction books.

“I love the mobile library,” says Farid, a nine-year-old shoeshine boy who is his family’s breadwinne­r and, like many Afghans, who goes by one name.

“I was there with another 10 children and the boy read a story to us. I really enjoyed my time there.”

Marwa, an 11-year-old in western Kabul, can hardly wait for the bus to arrive to jump in and start reading. She says in an AP report: “The first day I came on the bus, I was so happy that I didn’t want to leave and go home.”

Naweed Hamidi, who lives in northern Kabul, heard about the mobile library from relatives in the west of the city. “My 12-year-old son keeps asking me almost every day about the mobile library and when will it come to our area,” he says.

Karim says she has not approached any internatio­nal donors for support, preferring to rely on donations from friends and relatives, and plans to charge users.

“No matter how small, but I would like them to pay something,” she says.

“By putting a fee for the service, I encourage the children to value their time they spend in the library.” Streetchil­dren who cannot pay can donate a drawing or painting, she says.

It is not yet clear whether locals will be able to keep the mobile library running, but Karim is optimistic.

“The other day an army officer brought his young son into the bus and read him a book,” she says, adding that he donated 20 afghanis (RM1.10).

“We decided to keep that money and frame it because this is the very first donation that we got from the community.” – Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ??  ?? Marwa didn’t want to leave the first time she boarded the big blue bus. — Photos: AP
Marwa didn’t want to leave the first time she boarded the big blue bus. — Photos: AP
 ??  ?? Children are always eager to board the bus when it appears in their neighbourh­ood.
Children are always eager to board the bus when it appears in their neighbourh­ood.
 ?? — AP ?? Afghan children reading books on the bus called the ‘Walnut’. From sunrise to sunset, the bus drives around Kabul’s neighbourh­oods, stopping in each place for a couple of hours at a time.
— AP Afghan children reading books on the bus called the ‘Walnut’. From sunrise to sunset, the bus drives around Kabul’s neighbourh­oods, stopping in each place for a couple of hours at a time.
 ??  ?? Karim (right) helping children to read books inside her bus.
Karim (right) helping children to read books inside her bus.
 ??  ?? Nine-year-old Zainab enjoying a rare treat in her life: a story book.
Nine-year-old Zainab enjoying a rare treat in her life: a story book.
 ??  ?? The kids are happy to show off what they’re reading in the bus.
The kids are happy to show off what they’re reading in the bus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia