Houdan's family is facing the future with confidence in Somaliland

Monday, February 7, 2022

Agla*, 10, came close to losing her dream because her mother could not take her to school. When children her age went to the village school smartly dressed in their uniforms, Agla stayed at home helping her mother with house chores. Sometimes she played alone.

 

I felt desperate and asked my mother when I would join a school,” says Agla. “My mother told me that to go to school I needed a school uniform and she could not afford to buy.”  Agla says learning was often on her mind and she wondered if she would ever sit in a classroom.

 

Agla lives with her mother and five siblings 7, 6, 3, 2 years, and 6 months old in Berbera town, Somaliland. Her father and family’s breadwinner left when she was 4 years old - plunging the family into great financial distress.

 

To feed her children, Agla’s mother, Houdan, started selling ice cream. Her meagre income partially covered food needs and nothing else. Rent accrued and she was afraid her children would end up on the street.

 

My young children survived on one little meal per day,” says Houdan. “They cried of hunger but I did not have money to buy food. I told them their father would bring some food, but it was not true. I was desperate.”

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Somaliland family

Houdan, 30, remarried hoping her new husband would help her provide for the children. Unfortunately, the marriage did not last - it broke up after one year leaving Houdan with another mouth to feed.

 

When Agla and her siblings reached school-going age, Houdan kept them at home for lack of money to meet the cost of school essentials. Primary school education is free in Somaliland, but parents need to buy uniforms and school supplies. Some schools charge 2 US dollars to cater for expenses such as stationery, chalks, and other educational materials. 

 

In Somaliland, one in every two children does not attend school due to poverty, drought, food insecurity, or inequality.

 

Best life

 

Houdan wanted the best for her children, but she needed support to achieve this important goal in their lives.  In 2021, the SOS Children’s Village family strengthening programme enlisted the family for support.

 

Caregivers in the program attend classes in parenting and child development, entrepreneurship, and learn how to manage their finances. Supporting households in need diminishes the likelihood of child abuse, neglect and family separation.

 

In order to attend school, Agla and her three siblings received school uniforms and supplies. Through a local community-based organisation (CBO), Houdan acquired 300 USD to boost her ice–cream business. With a good income, she could better meet the daily needs of her children.

 

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somalia school

 

I felt happy when I got the uniforms because it meant I could join school - a white shirt, black Hijab, and a brown skirt,” says Agla. “Education is very important because it will shape my future; it will also help me get a job and that will help my family.”

 

I was very excited when I saw my children go to the school to study, like the other children in our village,” says Houdon. “Lack of education could have pushed them to the streets to engage in risky behaviour.”

 

Agla is now in grade one. She goes to school in the morning and attends Madarasa in the afternoon. She is thriving in the core subjects, English, maths, and Arabic. She was among the top ten students in her recent midterm exam.

 

I want to be a teacher when I grow up,” says Agla. “There are no female teachers in my school, and she would like to change that.”

 

Business growth

 

With the grant Houdan received, she bought two new refrigerators to stock more ice cream. “This business has great potential since Berbera is a hot place, and people like to cool themselves with cold drinks and ice cream,” says Houdan. “There are two large primary schools in my village and the students are my customers. My business is mobile but in the future, I want to sell from a shop.”

 

Houdan plans to extend the business to open new branches in and outside Berbera.

 

Business is good and I am now able to buy clothes, pay Quranic fees and buy healthy food for my children,” says Houdan. ”Our diet has changed and we now eat meat and fish. We are happier as a family and I am no longer afraid of the future.”

 

somalia family

 

*Name changed to protect the privacy of the child.

Canadians wishing to help vulnerable children are encouraged to sponsor a child, sponsor an SOS Village or make a one-time donation. Your support will change the lives of orphaned, abandoned and other vulnerable children. Please help today.