Transforming Outrage into Action – Hawa’s Story
August 21, 2013 | Donor Direct Action
The little girl’s father believed boys and girls should be educated, and he opposed female genital mutilation (FGM). The little girl’s older sister had died at age nine from tetanus, after being cut. If her father had had his way it wouldn’t have happened–but it was their stepmother’s responsibility. She knew no better.
The little girl suffered—great pain, rage, confusion. She learned how her sister had died only after she herself had been cut. She never stopped remembering it. She grew up, trained as a teacher, even served in the Ministry of Education. Wars swept through Somalia, a numbing, ritual violence. She fled abroad. But she never stopped remembering.
She learned how her sister had died only after she herself had been cut. She never stopped remembering it.
She returned, and with her sister started a girls’ school in Kismayo—which then fell to the militia. The school had to close and she fled again. But the exile community urged her to resume her work, this time in Galkayo. It was hard. Authorities opposed her centre’s programs because they addressed not only girls’ education but women’s empowerment. Sometimes she felt pain, rage, confusion.
Now, more than two decades later, the internationally praised center in Galkayo is a major force for Somali women and girls. And the little girl who grew into a woman long ago, Hawa Aden Mohamed, has never stopped working on what she could never stop remembering.
Her greatest challenge today is paying the teachers $100 per month to keep the school going.