World

Syrian boy wins Children's Peace Prize for building refugee school in Lebanon

December 05, 2017
16-year old Syrian Mohamad Al Jounde (R) celebrates after receiving the International Children's Peace Prize, given to him by Pakistani activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai at the Ridderzaal in the Hague. — AFP
16-year old Syrian Mohamad Al Jounde (R) celebrates after receiving the International Children's Peace Prize, given to him by Pakistani activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai at the Ridderzaal in the Hague. — AFP

LONDON — A teenage Syrian refugee won a prestigious international prize on Monday for building a school and providing an education to hundreds of children who fled to Lebanon to escape the conflict.

Mohamad Al Jounde was just 12 years old when he decided to set up a school in the Bekaa Valley refugee camp, enlisting his relatives and volunteers to help construct the building and teach a range of subjects from English and maths to photography.

Three years on, the school boasts more than 200 students, some as young as five, several professional teachers and offers gender equality lessons and literacy classes for adult refugees.

"I felt happy to be not just a teacher, but a friend, and we became a family — we are stronger together," said Jounde, the 2017 winner of the annual International Children's Peace Prize.

"This is not just about teaching reading and writing, but giving young refugees a safe space to express themselves," the 16-year-old told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

Previous winners of the award, launched in 2005 by the Dutch KidsRights Foundation, include Malala Yousafzai, the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, who was shot in Pakistan in 2012 by the Taliban for advocating girls' rights to education.

"As Mohamad knows, Syria's future depends on its children — and their future depends on education," Yousafzai, now 20 and studying at Britain's Oxford University, said at the award ceremony in The Hague where she presented the prize to Jounde.

The Syrian civil war, now in its seventh year, has killed hundreds of thousands of people and uprooted 11 million.

More than 2.5 million Syrian children are refugees, about 500,000 of whom are residing in Lebanon, KidsRights said. Many struggle to get enough nutritious food or access healthcare, and almost half of those aged between six and 14 are out of school.

"It is very important to give these children an education, otherwise they could become a lost generation," Jounde said. — Thomson Reuters Foundation


December 05, 2017
130 views
HIGHLIGHTS
World
3 hours ago

Fresh missile barrage hits Israeli port city as high-level talks begin in Geneva

World
7 hours ago

Israeli military kills 23 Palestinians near aid site in Gaza, witnesses and medics say

World
7 hours ago

Pro-Palestinian activists break into RAF airbase