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AsiaSoutheast Asia

Refugees in Indonesia tackle life in limbo through school

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Refugee children at a pioneering school in Cisarua, West Java. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Mahboob Jafari had barely seen the inside of a classroom, let alone taught in one, before he arrived in Indonesia as a refugee fleeing persecution in Afghanistan.

The 19-year-old now teaches English at a pioneering school in the mountains south of Jakarta, where refugees from war-torn corners of the globe are banding together to educate their children.

Founded by refugees, for refugees, this unique initiative is giving these children a chance to go to school while they wait years for resettlement to a new country.

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“Years ago, when I came to Indonesia, I could not imagine that one day I would study in such a school like this one,” said 14-year-old Ali Riad from Iraq at the Refugee Learning Nest in Cisarua.

“In the future I want to be a doctor and help people.”

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