Syria: Teaching in Qamishli amid the explosions is agony
Nisreen Abdulrahman is a teacher in Qamishli, the largest Kurdish city in northeastern Syria, where Turkey launched a military offensive in October.
She says that blasts repeatedly occur near school walls, many schools shut down, and many of students have dropped out of education since the eight-year-long civil war started. Books are torn, there is a lack of desks and heating is a big problem. As a mother of three, every time she sends her children to school, she fears that they won’t come back.
Image: English teacher Nisreen Abdulrahman standing in her classroom in Qamishli, holding the torn cover of a history book. Courtesy: Nisreen Abdulrahman
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
![]()
Women in Conflict—Newshour
Audio diaries of women who are working in the world's most war-torn areas
More clips from Newshour
![]()
First Lady calls for sacking of Jimmy Kimmel for 'widow' joke
Duration: 04:03
![]()
Why do we sometimes get a 'spooky' feeling in old buildings?
Duration: 04:34
![]()
'I was right behind the president' at gala shooting
Duration: 03:59
![]()
Renowned Indian photographer Raghu Rai dies at 83
Duration: 06:57






