Rural Afghan schoolgirls pen handwritten college essays for a college that doesn't exist — yet

The GroundTruth Project
Letter header

UPDATE: Thanks to an international fundraising campaign on the crowdfunding site Indiegogo, nearly $120,000 has been raised to build a community college in Deh Subz. Read more here.

The first ever school for girls in the rural village in Deh Subz, Afghanistan will graduate its first class this fall. Where they're headed from there, is still up in the air.

In spite of the dangerous odds, the Zabuli Education Center has been protected by village elders since its 2008 debut and transformed the town's girls, their families and community over the course of the last eight years. As GroundTruth Project filmmaker Beth Murphy's documentary, "What Tomorrow Brings," shows, the all-female student body has learned to read and write, but more importantly, believe in themselves and command respect when speaking up against forced engagements. 

While a fundraiser by ZEC founder Razia Jan to build the girls a technical college is underway, for now, graduates have no where to continue their educations, putting them at risk of child marriage. As an excercise in ambition and hope, the girls were prompted to write college application essays.

Read them below:

Aziza

Aziza

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Aziza letter

Aziza's essay

Credit:

Groundtruth Project

Breshna

Breshna

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Breshna Essay

Breshna's essay

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Mursal

Mursal

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Mursal essay

Mursal essay

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Refeha

Refeha

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Rafeha essay

Refeha essay

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Yalda

Yalda

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Yalda essay

Yalda essay

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Negeena

Negeena essay

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Negeena

Negeena essay

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Shakira

Shakira

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

Shakira essay

Shakira essay

Credit:

Courtesy Groundtruth Project

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