![BBC Tareq, a 10-year-old Palestinian boy, sits on a pile of rubble in Gaza, wearing jeans, a sweater, and a yellow backpack](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/c5a9/live/1263abf0-e549-11ef-bd1b-d536627785f2.jpg.webp)
Tareq, 10, from Gaza, and Safaa, 14, from Sudan reside about 2,000km aside. They’ve by no means met, however they share a harsh actuality – conflict has stolen their training.
“After I noticed my college in ruins, a deep disappointment overwhelmed me. I lengthy for it to return to what it as soon as was,” Tareq tells the BBC from Gaza.
“Regardless of every part, I have not stopped studying. I research at house, ensuring to not waste a second so after I do return to highschool, I might be prepared,” he provides.
In Sudan, Safaa desires of turning into a coronary heart surgeon. “I am nonetheless holding on to hope,” she says, however she has traumatic recollections of the nation’s civil conflict.
“Our bodies had been scattered in all places, which deeply moved me and made me need to save lives as an alternative of seeing them being misplaced.”
![Safaa, a 14-year-old Sudanese girl, is pictured in a refugee camp with five other children. Safaa is wearing a long-sleeved beige outfit and a patterned scarf.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/e08d/live/ef0bdc80-e549-11ef-bd1b-d536627785f2.png.webp)
Tareq and Safaa are among the many 30 million kids who, in keeping with the United Nations kids’s company Unicef, are out of faculty within the Center East and North Africa. It estimates that greater than half – 16.5 million – are in Sudan alone.
In response, the BBC World Service has launched an Arabic version of its award-winning academic programme Dars – or Lesson.
Up to now yr in Gaza, “over 600,000 kids – that is all of the school-aged kids in Gaza – did not get training”, says Saleem Oweis, a spokesperson for Unicef.
“We’re seeing a sample of how conflicts, insecurity and crises are inflicting actual hurt on kids’s training and studying,” he provides.
In Sudan, almost two years after a civil conflict erupted between the military and the paramilitary Speedy Help Forces, tens of millions of youngsters reside in refugee camps the place training is simply out there by means of native initiatives.
In an interview with the BBC, Sudan’s training minister, Ahmed Khalifa, highlights the size of devastation.
“No state was spared,” he says. “Sudan has roughly 15,000 public colleges. Between 60% and 70% of those colleges have been utterly broken, shedding their foundations, infrastructure and books.
“Even in safer states, colleges have suffered injury as a result of systematic destruction by militias.”
![An illustrative image from a Dars lesson shows two young people: a boy with brown hair, wearing an orange top and blue glasses, and a girl with brown hair in a bun, wearing a pink hoodie. Both have one hand raised. In the middle, there is a man in beige clothing.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/00bb/live/0375ca50-e545-11ef-a319-fb4e7360c4ec.png.webp)
Dars was first launched in 2023 for kids in Afghanistan, together with women barred from secondary college, with the United Nations describing it as a “studying lifeline” for kids unable to attend courses.
Designed for kids between the ages of 11 and 16, Dars Arabic has weekly classes on a variety of topics together with maths, know-how, local weather and psychological well being.
It additionally options the tales of youngsters, reminiscent of Tareq and Safaa, who regardless of conflict and different obstacles, are nonetheless decided to study.
The primary episode aired on Sunday 9 February, on BBC Information Arabic TV. New episodes are broadcast weekly on Sundays at 05:30 GMT (07:30 EET), with repeats at 10:05 GMT (12:05 EET) and all through the week.
The programme can be out there on digital platforms, together with BBC Information Arabic YouTube, in addition to lifeline radio providers in Gaza and Syria.