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NEWS
Ending war by educating girls
July 13, 2008 Op-Ed Columnist: It Takes a School, Not Missiles By
NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Since 9/11, Westerners have tried two approaches to fight terrorism in
Pakistan, President Bush’s and Greg Mortenson’s.
Mr. Bush has focused on military force and provided more than $10
billion — an extraordinary sum in the foreign-aid world — to the highly
unpopular government of President Pervez Musharraf. This approach has
failed: the backlash has radicalized Pakistan’s tribal areas so that
they now nurture terrorists in ways that they never did before 9/11.
Mr. Mortenson, a frumpy, genial man from Montana, takes a diametrically
opposite approach, and he has spent less than one-ten-thousandth as much
as the Bush administration. He builds schools in isolated parts of
Pakistan and Afghanistan, working closely with Muslim clerics and even
praying with them at times.
The only thing that Mr. Mortenson blows up are boulders that fall onto
remote roads and block access to his schools.
Mr. Mortenson has become a legend in the region, his picture sometimes
dangling like a talisman from rearview mirrors, and his work has struck
a chord in America as well. His superb book about his schools, “Three
Cups of Tea,” came out in 2006 and initially wasn’t reviewed by most
major newspapers. Yet propelled by word of mouth, the book became a
publishing sensation: it has spent the last 74 weeks on the paperback
best-seller list, regularly in the No. 1 spot.
Now Mr. Mortenson is fending off several dozen film offers. “My concern
is that a movie might endanger the well-being of our students,” he
explains.
Mr. Mortenson found his calling in 1993 after he failed in an attempt to
climb K2, a Himalayan peak, and stumbled weakly into a poor Muslim
village. The peasants nursed him back to health, and he promised to
repay them by building the village a school.
Scrounging the money was a nightmare — his 580 fund-raising letters to
prominent people generated one check, from Tom Brokaw — and Mr.
Mortenson ended up selling his beloved climbing equipment and car. But
when the school was built, he kept going. Now his aid group, the Central
Asia Institute, has 74 schools in operation. His focus is educating
girls.
To get a school, villagers must provide the land and the labor to assure
a local “buy-in,” and so far the Taliban have not bothered his schools.
One anti-American mob rampaged through Baharak, Afghanistan, attacking
aid groups — but stopped at the school that local people had just built
with Mr. Mortenson. “This is our school,” the mob leaders decided, and
they left it intact.
Mr. Mortenson has had setbacks, including being kidnapped for eight days
in Pakistan’s wild Waziristan region. It would be naïve to think that a
few dozen schools will turn the tide in Afghanistan or Pakistan.
Still, he notes that the Taliban recruits the poor and illiterate, and
he also argues that when women are educated they are more likely to
restrain their sons. Five of his teachers are former Taliban, and he
says it was their mothers who persuaded them to leave the Taliban; that
is one reason he is passionate about educating girls.
So I have this fantasy: Suppose that the United States focused less on
blowing things up in Pakistan’s tribal areas and more on working through
local aid groups to build schools, simultaneously cutting tariffs on
Pakistani and Afghan manufactured exports. There would be no immediate
payback, but a better-educated and more economically vibrant Pakistan
would probably be more resistant to extremism.
“Schools are a much more effective bang for the buck than missiles or
chasing some Taliban around the country,” says Mr. Mortenson, who is an
Army veteran.
Each Tomahawk missile that the United States fires in Afghanistan costs
at least $500,000. That’s enough for local aid groups to build more than
20 schools, and in the long run those schools probably do more to
destroy the Taliban.
The Pentagon, which has a much better appreciation for the limits of
military power than the Bush administration as a whole, placed large
orders for “Three Cups of Tea” and invited Mr. Mortenson to speak.
“I am convinced that the long-term solution to terrorism in general, and
Afghanistan specifically, is education,” Lt. Col. Christopher Kolenda,
who works on the Afghan front lines, said in an e-mail in which he raved
about Mr. Mortenson’s work. “The conflict here will not be won with
bombs but with books. ... The thirst for education here is palpable.”
Military force is essential in Afghanistan to combat the Taliban. But
over time, in Pakistan and Afghanistan alike, the best tonic against
militant fundamentalism will be education and economic opportunity.
So a lone Montanan staying at the cheapest guest houses has done more to
advance U.S. interests in the region than the entire military and
foreign policy apparatus of the Bush administration.
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