Children from marginalised Iraqi community have a school again after 14 years

Al Zuhoor Children Return To School 1
Many of Iraq's Kawliya children are returning to school (UNICEF)

Barriers to education, Discrimination of marginalised children, Right to education

A campaign by activists has finally seen education return to a poor village inhabited by people from the persecuted Kawliya minority. 


Iraq’s Kawliya minority have long been marginalised by society. But in al-Zuhoor, they finally have an elementary school again – nearly 14 years after the village’s only school was ransacked and destroyed at the hands of an Islamic militia.

Al-Zuhoor is near the city of Diwaniya, 95 miles south of Baghdad. Roughly 420 people live in mud houses and reed huts lining unpaved streets.

With no basic services, the village’s primary school and clinic, built by the government of Saddam Hussein, were damaged by an Islamic militia in a mortar attack on the village in late 2003, months after a US-led invasion toppled him from power.

The school was reopened with the help of United Nations children’s agency UNICEF after a campaign started by civilian activists on Facebook called I am a Human Being. It is made of a cluster of caravans provided by UNICEF on Al-Zuhoor’s outskirts.

The school has 27 children aged six to 10 and a teaching staff of a headmaster and two teachers.

Malak Wael, 10, said her family encouraged her to come to school and learn.

Al Zuhoor Children Return To School 2

The school was reopened with the help of UNICEF (UNICEF)

Headmaster Qassim Abbas Jassim said the school and the village suffer from a lack of electricity and safe drinking water.

Scorned by many Muslims and barely tolerated by the rest of society, Iraq’s Kawliya live a precarious existence. Lacking education or skills, they form one of the lower rungs of Iraq’s social system and are not granted Iraqi citizenship.

Manar al-Zubaidi, representative of the I am a Human Being group who lobbied for a year for the construction of the school, urged the government to grant the Kawliya Iraqi nationality to help their children continue with their studies and get jobs.

Under Saddam, the Kawliya had some protection from persecution – partly in exchange for supplying dancers, alcohol and prostitutes, Iraqis say. 

The safety net disappeared with Saddam’s overthrow, leaving them open to the whims of religious militia groups contemptuous of their freewheeling ways.

The Kawliya speak Arabic and profess belief in Islam. Most originated in India, although a few came from other Middle Eastern countries. 



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