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Afghani parents, who in the past forbade their daughters to attend school due to societal taboos, are once again keeping them at home because of attacks by militants wielding acid or worse, National Public Radio reports. Nearly half the country's children do not attend classes, most of them in the Taliban-rife south, says Afghanistan's education minister, Farouq Wardak. Hundreds of schools have closed in Kandahar and neighboring provinces because of militant attacks and threats.
Yet many girls are refusing to give up their schooling, no matter the cost. The Afghan government, aid groups, and defiant teachers are operating public schools and secret, in-home classes in a risky effort to ensure that Afghan girls get an education. Today, the number of classes exceeds 400, each with about 30 students. To help coax families into sending their girls, students are given wheat, cooking oil, and salt. "I want to serve my nation and my country," says 17-year-old teacher Marzia Sadat. "If the militants kill me, so be it. I pray to God, as do my mother and father, and that gives me the strength not to be afraid," she says.
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