ШКОЛЫ МИРА В АФРИКЕ

AfricaSchool of Peace

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 "We suffer enormously in Africa. We have many problems at the level of children’s rights, we have war, illness, lack of food…"
This is what Yaguine and Fodé wrote in August 1999. They were two young Guinean who died in the landing gear of an airliner flying to Brussels. They had climbed aboard in a vain attempt to hand deliver this letter to the 'Sirs in charge of Europe." It was a cry for help, the symbol of the condition of African children and adolescents in a continent that is statistically the youngest but where malnutrition, illiteracy, and child-death rate reach unsettling numbers.
The effort of the Community of Sant'Egidio in Africa has been promoting a tight network of the Schools of Peace ('Escolas da Paz' in Mozambique, 'Ecoles Populaires' in Francophone Africa) reaching out to more than 14,000 children and adolescents at present.
They are children and youths who are forced to grow fast and to work in order to help their families. They deal with a school that cannot guarantee them an education because classes are overcrowded and school books too expensive. They are children and adolescents who are malnourished and poorly dressed and whose health is put to the test, not only by dangerous illnesses, but also by harsh life conditions. Among them there are many children who live on the street too, without any kind of family ties. For them the Schools of Peace are the true family that takes care of them.

The School of Peace is offering to all these children balanced nutritional supplements, scholastic support, tutoring, close attention to their health and a comprehensive support for the entire family.
The first centres were realised in Mozambique, which today is still the country where this activity is mostly widespread. From Mozambique the 'Schools of Peace' have branched out to the whole of Africa and include English, French, and Portuguese speaking countries.
 
The Community of Sant'Egidio in Africa runs hundreds of centers in 24 countries for more than 14,000 children and adolescents.