Roshan the camel brings books to homeschooling children

Published April 27, 2021
Children stand next to the camel that has brought books in Mand.—Reuters
Children stand next to the camel that has brought books in Mand.—Reuters

PLODDING his way through the desert in remote southwest Pakistan, Roshan the camel carries priceless cargo: books for children who can no longer go to school because of coronavirus lockdowns.

The school children, who live in remote villages where the streets are too narrow for vehicles, put on their best clothes and rush out to meet Roshan. They crowd around the animal shouting “the camel is here!”

Pakistan’s schools first closed in response to the Covid-19 pandemic in March 2020, and have only opened sporadically since then, with around 50 million school-age children and university students told to continue their education from home. It’s been especially difficult in places like Balochistan, where in many villages internet access is almost non-existent.

Raheema Jalal, a high school principal who foun­ded the Camel Library project with her sister, a fede­ral minister, says she star­ted the library last August because she wanted child­­ren around her remote hometown to continue learn­ing despite schools being closed.

The project is a collaboration with the Female Educ­ation Trust and Alif Laila Book Bus Society, two NGOs that have been running children’s library projects in the country for 36 years.

Roshan carries the books to four different villages in the district of Kech, visiting each village three times a week and staying for about two hours each time. Children borrow books and return them the next time Roshan visits.

“I like picture books, bec­a­use when I look at the pictures and the photographs, I can understand the story better,” nine-year-old Amb­areen Imran told Reuters.

Jalal hopes to continue and expand the project to cover more villages, but needs funding: around $118 a month is needed now each month for Roshan.

Murad Ali, Roshan’s owner, says he was taken aback when he was first contacted about the project, but thought camels were the sensible mode of transport.

Published in Dawn, April 27th, 2021

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