Teachers at Nemuthajia Elementary School in Benghazi, Libya, will return Sept. 17 for the first day of classes in a new Libya. It will be the first time in 42 years they can teach the truth, they say.
Benghazi, LibyaAt a small elementary school here in Libya?s second-largest city, dozens of teachers are preparing for the first day of classes since the fighting started in February and abruptly forced all schools to close.
Skip to next paragraphThey gather in sunny but spare classrooms surrounding a bare courtyard with peach walls. According to a sign above the entrance, this is Maarakat El Karama Elementary School. But the teachers shake their heads at mention of the name. It was bestowed on the school after the 1969 coup led by Muammar Qaddafi, who became Libya?s leader for the next 42 years before being ousted by this year?s revolution. The teachers have decided to return to the original name of the school, El Nemuthajia. It means ?exemplary.?
But the school?s name isn?t the only thing that will change when students come back on Sept. 17. ?Next week, for the first time in 40 years, the teachers will begin teaching the truth,? says Zakia Abdel Nabi, an elderly Arabic language teacher.
Getting rid of Qaddafi propaganda that fills the textbooks is just one of the tasks ahead as Libya faces the enormous challenge ? and opportunity ? of rebuilding an education system that was systematically eroded for four decades. Libya?s new leaders must also work to transform a system that sought to instill the regime?s ideology in unquestioning students into one that encourages dissenting opinions, critical thinking, and dialogue. Doing so, say education experts, will be key to building a strong and democratic Libya.
?If education doesn?t change, nothing else will change,? says Hana El Gallal, a law professor at Benghazi University and rights activist. ?This is for me the biggest challenge and the biggest fight ahead.?
And there is much work to be done. Teachers receive dismal salaries, and little, if any, training. Corporal punishment for students is rife. Officials say that new school construction has been mostly nonexistent for 20 years while the population grew, leading to overcrowding. (Making matters worse, during the revolution hundreds of school buildings across the country were damaged or mined, looted, or used as makeshift munitions storage depots, prisons, or housing for refugees.)
And while teaching standards were low, 9th and 12th grade exams were purposefully made so difficult that only 30 percent of the students would pass and go on to secondary and higher education. That left 70 percent of them to drop out of school altogether or go to technical training, says Wafa Bugaighis, an official with the transitional leadership?s Ministry of Education who helped develop the ministry?s plan for getting education back on track.
?There was a systematic destruction of the education sector,? she says. ?There has been no training, no investment, no upgrading.?
Textbooks were infused with Qaddafi regime ideals to train obedient citizens. The most blatant was a subject called ?The People?s Society," in which students studied, among other things, Qaddafi?s Green Book laying out his political philosophy. But his propaganda was also woven into history textbooks, which teachers say almost totally omitted mention of the monarchy that Qaddafi?s coup overthrew.
?A huge period was missing? from the history books, says history teacher Abdel Salam El Imami. "I didn't know who tried to unite all of Libya after colonization ? it was the monarchy." But under Qaddafi, he couldn't teach that to students. In Arabic language lessons, the text to be studied often contained stories about the leader.
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