Skip to main content
Skip to sub-navigation
About USAID Our Work Locations Policy Press Business Careers Stripes Graphic USAID Home
USAID: From The American People Telling our Story At the Dodicha Vegetable Cooperative, women and children pick green beans that will be sold to a local exporter, who will sell them to supermarkets in Europe - Click to read this story
Telling Our Story
Home »
Submit a story »
Calendars »
FAQs »
About »
Stories by Region
Asia »
Europe & and Eurasia »
Latin America & the Carribean »
Middle East »
Sub-Saharan Africa »

 

Mali
USAID Information: External Links:
Search
Search by topic or keyword
Advanced Search

 

Community Schools Reach Remote Areas in Mali

Photo: Aissata Garba studying math in her family’s courtyard
Photo: CARE Mali/John Uniack Davis
Aissata Garba studying math in her family’s courtyard


Aissata is just one of the over 160,000 children in Mali who would not have had the opportunity to attend school were it not for USAID’s program of supporting parents and communities in the establishment of safe, effective schools that are close to home.

Aissata Garba walks with a crutch to support her paralyzed right leg. She had long dreamed of going to school but her handicap prevented her from walking the 8 kilometers necessary to reach the nearest school in Tassakan. When the first school in her village of Toya was opened in 1999 with USAID help, Aissata was 10-years-old—one year older than permitted by the entrance regulations.

Nonetheless, Aissata, who is known for her moral strength and determination, was accepted. She has continued to attend school and in 2003, entered her fourth year at Toya Community School. She is one of the best students in her class, and forever grateful for the opportunity to attend school.

Print-friendly version of this page (244kb - PDF)

Back to Top ^

Fri, 31 Mar 2006 17:02:53 -0500
Star