• Stumble Upon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
 

School-in-a-Box Helps Children in Quake-Hit Kashmir

UNICEF's School-in-a-Box kit
Enlarge UNICEF

UNICEF's School-in-a-Box kit contains classroom supplies such as scissors, chalk and chalkboards, pens, pencils, crayons, tape and other materials that support up to 80 students.

UNICEF's School-in-a-Box kit
UNICEF

UNICEF's School-in-a-Box kit contains classroom supplies such as scissors, chalk and chalkboards, pens, pencils, crayons, tape and other materials that support up to 80 students.

text sizeAAA
October 20, 2006

A year after a powerful earthquake devastated South Asia's Kashmir region, UNICEF is providing a unique kind of emergency relief: its School-in-a-Box program.

Each aluminum box contains classroom supplies for up to 80 students, and 10,000 kits were distributed in Pakistan over the past year. The 110-pound boxes are often carried by donkeys or small boats.

The culturally neutral materials include writing utensils, notebooks, rulers, counting blocks and posters, says Ellen van Kamthout, UNICEF's senior project officer for education in emergencies.

Weeks after last fall's earthquake largely destroyed Government Girls Higher Secondary School Gojra in Muzaffarabad, Pakistan, it reopened with the help of UNICEF tents and, for the younger girls, two School-in-a-Box kits.

Hundreds of girls continue to attend lessons beneath the Gojra School's tents.

And although life in Muzaffarabad remains far from normal, teacher Shagufta Sheikh says education lifts her students' spirits.

 
  • Stumble Upon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
 

Podcast and RSS Feeds

PodcastRSS

  • World
     
  • All Things Considered
     
 
 

Comments

Discussions for this story are now closed. Please see the Community FAQ for more information.

 

podcast

Foreign Dispatch Podcast

Foreign Dispatch Podcast

A weekly podcast of the biggest news and best stories from NPR's foreign correspondents from around the world.

Subscribe