Jamil is an Afghan refugee who is removing multiple barriers that prevent refugees with disabilities from going to school in Pakistan
Second-generation Afghan refugee Jamil was born in Pakistan. As a person with a disability as well as a refugee, he has overcome a series of obstacles in trying to get an education.
Community members prevented Jamil from attending school in his village in northwest Pakistan. Neighbours in the Lower Dir district of Pakistan’s rugged Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where he lived would say that he could never become a teacher or a soldier.
“No one thought I could do anything,” he says. “My parents were interested [in sending me to school], but some of the community elders put hurdles in the way – they said that I was disabled and couldn’t be educated.”
Jamil knew better. Now aged 33, he has dedicated his life to removing the multiple barriers that prevent refugees with disabilities from getting to school in Pakistan, and changing attitudes about what they can achieve once in the classroom.
“Being disabled, I can understand the feelings people with disabilities have and the pain they experience,” he says. “I wanted to do something for others, forgetting my own disability. I want to bring smiles to others’ faces.”
Four years ago, Jamil founded the Afghan Refugee Disabled Union (ARDU) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which is home to many refugees.
With the support of the Afghan refugee community, the local Union has so far distributed 60 wheelchairs to youngsters living in refugee villages, who need them to get to school and realise their potential.
“I wanted to do something for others, forgetting my own disability. I want to bring smiles to others’ faces.”
“I don’t want any disabled person to feel that they cannot be happy or self-reliant,” Jamil says of his work. “They can do anything they want.”
An estimated 12 million people with disabilities have been forcibly displaced by persecution, violence and human rights violations worldwide, although the real number may be much higher.
They are often at higher risk of violence, discrimination, exploitation and abuse, and face barriers to access basic services. In addition, they are often excluded from education and the chance to work and earn a living.
“I began to realise more and more that education was important in order to be heard,” Jamil says. “If you are not educated, you cannot achieve anything in your life. No one will listen.”
He finally got the opportunity to learn how to read and write at age 12, with home-based literacy and numeracy support from Basic Education for Afghan Refugees, UNHCR’s local partner.
With perseverance, he eventually gained entry to a local refugee village school, where he completed grade 3 at the age of 18. But, like many of the children and youth in his village, that was the ceiling for formal learning opportunities.
“I completed what I could … But there was nothing else for me and no chance to do more.”
As he continues with self-study – mathematics is a passion – he is pushing hard to get more refugees with disabilities into the classroom, and to challenge the low expectations of what they can achieve when they get there.
Among them is 16-year-old Gul Bibi*, a young refugee with disabilities. She previously relied on her parents to carry her to primary school each day, and nearly dropped out on several occasions, until Jamil worked with her family to get her a wheelchair.
“I started dreaming big when I came to know that brother Jamil is trying to help with my return to school, and is helping to get a wheelchair for my easy mobility,” she says.
“I began to realise more and more that education was important in order to be heard."
Gul has since completed her primary education and can now move freely on her own. She is more confident and optimistic about her future and wants to become an advocate – like Jamil – for access to education for people with disabilities.
“Many children with disabilities have been turned away, giggled at, and met with doubt and anxiety. Others who have been enrolled in school are not getting satisfactory support to ensure that their education is meaningful for them,” she says.
Another recent wheelchair recipient Jamil has helped is seven-year-old Awais, who has physical disabilities and became too heavy for his father, Zakar Ullah, a daily labourer, to carry. He struggled to get to school, the shops or hospital unaided.
“Jamil was always concerned for Awais and still visits him with sweets and his favourite cookies,” says Zakar Ullah. “Awais can now move and go to the playground and enjoy nature with very little support from me.”
UNHCR supports Jamil in his trailblazing work and is working with the government to expand educational opportunities for the 1.4 million Afghan refugees living in Pakistan, including those with disabilities.
For his part, Jamil continues to advocate for additional support for Afghan refugee children in his village. And he also wants his own community to recognise the value of education for all.
“Education has been important in making me who I am. My education is a strength. My disability is a strength,” he says. “I want my community to be positive. I want to empower other disabled community members, too. We are part of this world.”
*Name changed at refugee’s request.
Triggered by heavy monsoon rains, catastrophic floods in Pakistan have washed away homes and affected millions of people.
The majority of funds raised by Australia for UNHCR are directed to UNHCR’s emergency operations, providing the ready funds and resources to respond quickly and effectively in situations of crisis and disaster.