Releasing the Genius Releasing the Genius Magazine - Issue 1 | Page 6

RELEASING THE GENIUS 6 TEACHING MOTHERS TO TEACH THE WORLD The Amarok Society And Maala’s Promise BY TANYSS MUNRO M aala’s 12-year-old daughter, Roza, had a serious problem, and it was a problem she shared with a third of the children on earth: she was growing up illiterate. There are lots of reasons children don’t get an education in the developing world. Often, girls are prohibited from attending school as it disrupts their prescribed role in life of being a child- bride and obedient housewife thereafter. Boys are frequently needed to work to supplement their parents’ income, so they can’t spare the time. But with Roza, as with millions of other children, she just couldn’t afford the school supplies, uniform, or private tutor—all of which were completely necessary to stay afloat in her neighborhood’s “free” school. Maala was a singular woman in her slum in Bangladesh in that, when she looked at her daughter, she didn’t see a baby- making machine or, if lucky, a sweatshop employee. She saw a young woman with potential. So when an Amarok Society school opened up in her slum, Maala was determined to attend. WHAT’S AN AMAROK SOCIETY SCHOOL? IT’S A SIMPLE CONCEPT, AIMED AT REACHING THE 250 MILLION CHILDREN WORLDWIDE THAT CONVENTIONAL SCHOOLS DON’T REACH. INSTEAD OF BEING A SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN, AMAROK SOCIETY SCHOOLS ARE FOR MOTHERS. natural and desirable for a girl to be educated. Each school teaches 25 mothers. Then, in their own homes, each of those mothers teaches at least five children everything she’s learned. So essentially, these schools spawn a bunch of micro- schools throughout the community. Boys can attend because the micro- schools can be very flexible around time constraints, and girls can attend because each mother will have seen, through her own experience in class that morning, that it’s completely And then tragedy struck: a few months ago, Maala passed away. Maala worked hard in her class and was a proud teacher of Roza and other children in the neighborhood. She made a resolution: Roza was going to go to university. That doesn’t seem like much of a goal here, but back in Bangladesh, it’s a brave statement. It’s heroic. It stares at the bleak future that society says must be and demands something better. Roza was going to go to university. Maala was going to attend her school every day and teach her daughter every night until her promise was met. What happened to bright Roza? The world seemed ready to course-correct her back into a predictable life of poverty and squandered potential. Her father, no longer inspired by his late wife’s convictions, decided it was time to marry young Roza off. The closer a girl gets to 18, you see, the harder she is to find a husband for.