Comments about ‘Educating girls the key to peace, author says’
His nonprofit organizes building of schools in Pakistan, Afghanistan
What You May Have Missed
Most Popular
Across Site
In Featured Faiths
- Bottom 30 elementary schools in Utah by test...
- Top 30 elementary schools in Utah by test scores
- Growing pains: Rate of young men struggling...
- BYU student killed after falling 70 feet in...
- New president to lead Mormon Tabernacle Choir
- Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
- Gail Miller gets engaged to Salt Lake attorney
- Manti's 10th Rat Fink reunion marks 50 years...
Most Commented
Across Site
In Utah
- Make it a small: N.Y.'s ban on large...
37 - Glenn Beck unleashes his dogs of war
34 - Cottonwood High School football coach...
25 - Rep. Jim Matheson favors getting rid of...
15 - Idaho awaits No Child Left Behind waiver
14 - Poll shows Utahns think Legislature's...
14 - Man shot brother while showing him...
13 - Jon Huntsman Jr. is done pulling punches
12






Great, but why not focus on educating all? Is it more urgent to educate girls than boys?
Great article! The title is misleading though - it should read "Educate All For Peace." About 90% of the Afghan police force can't read or write (that's men), and that's part of why it's so difficult to fix things there. At the end of the docudrama movie "Charlie Wilson's War," Charlie Wilson requested money for Afghan schools after the afghans repulsed the russian invasion and the Taliban was destroying schools. His request was denied. What a shame! We wouldn't be in this situation if Congress had listened to Charlie Wilson.
As he explained, and you'd know if you read his book, it's the girls who are wholesale shut out of school, and who have the most influence for change if they're educated. But absolutely, of course, the boys must also be educated and not at the hands of radical mullahs. Charlie Wilson and Greg Mortensen are right. We will never bomb our way to peace in Afghaniston or Pakistan. Schools are the major answer.
Greg Mortensen said, "The real enemy we all face is ignorance."
I'm so glad our military leaders are reading his book about his experiences building schools in Afghanistan.
What a fantastic effort this is, and thanks for the link to the Central Asia Institute charity.
There's a broader theory for developing countries in Africa and Asia that has received much empirical support in academia that when women are educated, because they are the major caregivers in the household, they provide better care and encourage education for both their sons and daughters, and that can carry on to future generations. Men, often absent from the household due to work, do not provide the same level of commitment to their children. Thus, from a tactical perspective, it is targeting education to women.
Educated women know more about birth control and can limit the number of children they have, so it allows for less poverty. Education also provides greater opportunity for women, so some can become part of dual income families as well.
Agreed that all need an education, but you have to start somewhere. Greg has started and not given up hope where many others have only thought about helping or have given up hope.
THANK YOU Greg! You are a true hero.
Elizabeth
Education is always an answer to the problems we face, and that is why we pay our teachers top dollar!!
ha ha ha ha ahah
"Three Cups of Tea" is a great book. It's written, not by a journalist or a military person (the most common sources for our current information about these areas for most of us), but by and about someone who has lived as an integrated civilian in rural Pakistan on and off since the 1990s. It helps meld our Western perspective (which is valuable) with the often misunderstood perspective of the people there.
One of my favorite books because it's real. So motivating.
I heard his talk at BYU, it was very informative and inspiring. The audience was filled with students from many schools, not just BYU, many high school kids who had read the book as well as college students. His point on educating women is spot on.
(S)he who rocks the cradle, rules the world.
Has any of the warfare damaged any of the schools or students?
How come there isn't a single woman on the stand in the picture accompanying this article? Oh, men telling women what they already know!
the book and loved it. Fighting the extremists on their own turf, with nothing but the power of education. The key is indeed knowledge. I wished I would have known of his coming to Utah to speak at BYU. I would have loved to attend. Thanks for all that you do Mr. Mortenson.....
CHERYL,
The answer to your question is YES.
I loved 'Three Cups of Tea'. It opened up that part of the world to me and made the people real. That was the whole point, right? If the fanatics would bury themselves under a rock more Americans would realize that we all want the same things for our children.
Why has this man not won the Nobel for peace?????????
I was going to ask the same question. Why not him and why Obama???
all men in the photo.
as Pogo said...
With all the violence in Afghanistan and Pakistan, have any of Greg's schools been damaged and what about the villagers?
I am a big fan of Mr. Mortensen, but I have noticed he hasn't built any schools in Kandahar, Helmund province, or Farah province. I can assume this is because of the insecurity in those places. Can Mr. Mortensen get together with Malalai Joya and see if something can be worked out, at least in Farah?
DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments