Terdapat 96,300 orang pelarian dibawah UNHCR di Malaysia, 82 peratus 
daripadanya adalah dari Myanmar, selebihnya dari Sri Lanka, Somalia, 
Afghanistan dan Iraq. Majoriti mereka ini beragama Islam. Namun pendidikan , 
lebih-lebih pendidikan agama untuk mereka ini khususnya anak-anak pelarian ini 
seakan-akan terabai.
 
Refugees' struggle for education 
24 May 2012 
 
LEARNING TO COPE: Some 4,000 refugee children are studying in about 100 
learning centres nationwide. The centres have survived on the goodwill of 
charitable organisations and volunteers. Elizabeth Zachariah visited two 
learning centres and this was what she saw
 
NESTLED in the heart of the city, in Jalan Imbi, is a "school" on the top floor 
of a shoplot.  It caters to about 25 children, aged 4 to 17, who study in 
small, dingy rooms formed by thin  partitions.
 
This is no ordinary school for the students here are refugees and they are 
being tutored by volunteers and older refugees who had "graduated" from this 
school.
 
It is not called a school but a learning centre, which operates from Monday to 
Friday, from early morning till late afternoon.
 
There are about 4,000 refugee students studying at more than 100 learning 
centres nationwide. These 4,000 students make up only 35 per cent of the number 
of refugee children of school-going age.
 
And unlike local schools, which are funded by the government, these learning 
centres are run by the refugees and funded by caring locals and 
non-governmental organisations.
 
The children who are lucky enough to have access to education attend either 
education projects run by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 
(UNHCR) in collaboration with NGOs or learning centres, which are organised by 
the refugee communities with the support of non-refugee volunteers.
 
UNHCR external relations officer Yante Ismail said the refugee community 
recognised the importance of education and had set up informal learning centres 
to equip their children with basic reading, writing and arithmetic skills.
 
"Because they are denied proper education, the communities have done a 
remarkable job in setting up the learning centres even with limited resources," 
Yante said.
 
"However, the projects and learning centres are not formal education so the 
children cannot get into universities or further their education."
 
The UNHCR, Yante said, was concerned with the fact that the lack of basic 
education among refugee children would create a generation of illiterate, 
unskilled and not self-sufficient people.
 
There are seven education projects run by the UNCHR in Kuala Lumpur, Johor, 
Selangor and Penang. The teachers in the project use Malaysian school textbooks 
to teach English, Math, Science and Bahasa Malaysia.
 
"Only about 1,000 children attend education projects while the rest attend 
learning centres," Yante said.
 
The community-based learning centres are informal classes which are run by 
volunteers from the refugee community, faith-based groups and the private 
sector.
 
They are set up wherever there are refugee communities with a large number of 
school-going children. The number of students in each learning centre varies 
from 15 to as many as 100.
 
A typical learning centre consists of several classes with children of similar 
ages grouped together to form a class. Classes normally start at 9 or 10am and 
would last for about two hours. Some schools have morning and afternoon 
sessions to accommodate the large number of students.
 
The lack of resources, including qualified teachers and funding, restrict the 
scope and reach of these classes. Classes, which are usually held in rented 
flats or shophouses, are overcrowded and lack basic teaching equipment like 
stationery.
 
Yante said there was a growing need for volunteers to help with teaching and 
administration as well as skill-building training for the teachers.
 
"Besides that, these learning centres are in dire need of funds for 
transportation of children, rental and utility bills and meals."
 
To meet the costs, the learning centres collect a minimal fee of RM10 to RM30 
from each child who can afford it.
 
Refugee community organisations also help pool funds to support the basic needs 
of rental and UNHCR provides a monthly stipend for a limited number of 
teachers, textbooks, stationery, school bags and first-aid kits.
 
Yante said the UNHCR also trained the teachers and coordinates in areas like 
curriculum and examinations and had a small grant called the Social Protection 
Fund, where refugees could apply for funding to help with projects, including 
education.
 
Faith-based organisations, civil society groups and individuals are known to 
contribute to the learning centres in a variety of ways, including donating 
furniture, food and space for the classes to be held.
 
"Malaysians have been so generous in so many ways.
 
"There are many who volunteer as teachers and cook for the kids," Yante said, 
adding that there were about 500 volunteer teachers registered with the UNHCR.
 
There are currently 96,300 refugees and asylum-seekers registered with UNHCR in 
Malaysia, with 82 per cent from Myanmar and the others from Sri Lanka, Somalia, 
Afghanistan and Iraq.
 
http://www.nst.com.my/nation/general/spotlight-refugees-struggle-for-education-1.87056
 

Kirim email ke