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Student Contributor: Revival- Turning to Forgotten Cultural Practices

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

The Ritual Begins

Title Image: The Ritual Begins- Rapakan Aidarkulova, a 63-year-old woman from Karakol is a traditional Kyrgyz healer.

A crowd patiently waits, snaking around the dark halls of a small office. Some pace nervously while children bounce in laps. One’s first guess of this being an underequipped doctor’s office isn’t so far off. Actually, this busy room filled with clients who quickly enter and exit a small examination room, waiting for some mysterious physician are turning to the traditional Kyrgyz practice of healing that was once forgotten during Soviet times Rapakan Aidarkulova, a 63-year-old woman from Karakol near Lake Issyk Kul is just one healer playing an active part in this countrywide resurgence of traditional knowledge within Kyrgyzstan.

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Living With Disabilities: From Kidnapped Bride to Community Hero

Friday, February 12th, 2010

One woman’s struggle to improve the lives of the disabled within her community.

Baktygul

Title Image: Baktygul, the founder of the Beypil Rehabilitation Center of Bokonbeyvo.

 
West of Kyrgyzstan’s capital Bishkek, over the peaks of the Tien Shan Mountains, is Issyk Kul Oblast. Travelers from distant lands frequent this region in the hopes of seeing the unparalleled beauty of Eurasia’s highest lake, Issyk Kul. The gated beach communities create an allusion of a prosperous and developed retreat, but unbeknownst to most travelers, life for the majority of Kyrgyz people within this overwhelmingly rural area is an unrelenting fight for survival.

Outside of these vacation getaways, removed from adequate medical facilities, public transportation and commerce, remote villages speckle the mountainsides. Such a difficult environment has disproportionately affected the disabled who lack the most rudimentary facilities and are unable to receive medical treatment. The Kyrgyz government provides for these families to the best of their ability but given the state’s limited financial means, the average pension of $17 a month is scarcely enough for a basic diet of milk and bread.

After witnessing first hand the challenges her daughter faced with a disfigured cleft palate, one woman by the name of Baktygul, set out to tackle this problem gripping her community by creating a rehabilitation and work center for the disabled. At first openly ridiculed and ostracized, Baktygul struggled to secure financial, community and government support. Undiscouraged, she worked two jobs while raising a family to realize her dream.

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Education: Afghanistan’s Education System Through Student’s Eyes

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Young Afghan students studying at the American University of Central Asia in Bishkek Kyrgyzstan.Young Afghan students studying at the American University of Central Asia in Bishkek Kyrgyzstan.

Meeting children of states marred by turmoil and bloodshed is one of the few things capable of placing a face on the cost of war. Three decades of conflict has left Afghanistan with 49 percent of its population below the age of 15 and burgeoning demands for security, employment, and most problematically education.

Sultan Mahmod a senior at the American University of Central Asia spoke openly of the educational difficulties he has faced in Afghanistan. “When I was studying I couldn’t concentrate on my education because of the war,” he said. “Sometimes rockets or bomb blasts were near my school. Mostly we were thinking about our safety, or security not education.” Understandably, these difficulties prevented Sultan from learning how to read and write until the age of 11.

With the ending of a bloody civil war and the collapse of the Taliban, Afghanistan was left with a nonexistent education system and a population where only 17 percent of adults over the age of 25 had received formal schooling. This legacy is reflected in the October findings of the National Risk and Vulnerability Assessment, which confirmed the country’s education and literacy indicators reflect a “poorly performing education system.”

The efforts of the international community and the Afghan government have attempted to address the challenges faced by the current education system specifically: the lack of adequate facilities; low levels of literacy; an astounding gender gap in all education indicators; and unqualified teachers. Such efforts have brought limited success that many fear have become increasingly jeopardized by the country’s rapidly deteriorating security environment.

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