10-Year-Old Divorced girl Back in 2nd Grade
Yemeni 10-year-old divorcee Nujood Ali goes back to school
SANA, YEMEN—Still groggy, the schoolgirl brushed her hair, struggled to pull on her socks and snuggled into her school uniform: a green gown and a white head scarf.
By the time she gathered up her books and strapped on her backpack she was smiling and enthusiastic, her nervousness eclipsed by anticipation of the first day of class.
Like children across the world, 10-year-old Nujood Ali went back to school this month after a lengthy break. But Nujood hadn’t been lazing about or playing hide-and-seek with her friends during the summer.
Instead, after she was pulled out of the second grade by her father earlier this year, she was married off to a man three times her age, who beat her and sexually abused her.
For many girls in this traditional society, where tribal custom and conservative interpretations of Islam dominate, that would have been the end of the story. But Nujood was outraged. She gathered up her courage and on the advice of an aunt went to court in April. She got the help of a lawyer and filed for divorce.
On Tuesday morning, the divorcee, possibly the world’s youngest, once again became a schoolgirl.
“I’m very happy to be going back to school,” she said, waiting in her ramshackle home for her younger sister Haifa to get ready. “I’m going to study Arabic, the Koran, mathematics and drawing. I will do that with my classmates and I will definitely make friends there.”
Nujood’s unusual story of rebellion made her an international celebrity. Since The Times wrote of her in June, CNN, Elle magazine and other international media have come to this mountaintop capital to chronicle her tale.
Hordes of nonprofit organizations offered to help her get back to school, some even willing to foot the bill to send her abroad or to a fancy private academy, though they ignored Haifa, Nujood’s little sister and best friend.
In the end, Nujood opted for a small, government-run public school relatively close to her home. She would begin where she left off, starting the second grade again.
Even then, it wasn’t easy. One teacher said she worried that Nujood might disturb other students by talking about her sexual experiences.
What’s the problem Muslims, your founder Mohammed married a child? After all that is your culture!
I found it fascinating that this lovely young child cannot even see the face of her teacher, because Islam treats women like cattle. So, while she is free from being beaten and sexually assaulted, it is only temporary until she gets a bit older. Great religion this Islam!
