RAZIA'S RAY OF HOPE - podcast episode cover

RAZIA'S RAY OF HOPE

Oct 03, 202314 min
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Transcript

Good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome, and it's time now for our community connection right here on K one, the one you trust. Right now, it is ninety five and we have some special guests on the phone that we're going to speak to in just a moment. Today we're going to be talking about a very special event that's coming up. It is going to be a nice little fundraiser here. It's called Afghan We Can and it's coming up on October seventh, and it benefits Rajah's

Ray of Hope Girls School in Afghanistan. And on the telephone with me here I have Andrea and Rajah herself all the way from Boston. How are we doing today, ladies, Good morning, good morning, how are you. I'm very well. I'm Razia and I'm with andreas executive director for the program that has been going for almost twenty years. And we are very happy and thankful to the community that always welcomes us and have great events and really helps

us to go forward in this hard time that we are facing. But fortunately my school is safe. My school is up to date with all the students in there. We have close to a thousand girls and right now we have up to sixth grade that the school is open. But I hope and I'm working on that coming this year, which the school years start in March, that my senior girls from seven to twelve grades will be also allowed to come

back to school. That would be that would be awesome. We thank you very much, and you know, we just we are really people that we just think and thank God and never know what tomorrow brings. And so it's something that this is my motto, and but we go if we can go

one inch forward, we can help one girl, one family. And I think I have to tell you something very special that for the past few years, we are helping the families do good with food and supplies because most of the men have lower jobs and we have a lot of girls that need help

with everything that they can survivealce on a daily basis. Also, we have a widows program that we have about many I think forty one families that have no husbands or no support and there's a program that we help them on monthly basis for each child, for them and for their families to have food on their able and to have clothed on them and to have shoes on their feet, so I think and this your town has been amazing, Your people have

been amazing. They have such a great help to us. It's almost not twenty years really that long that it seems like it's been going by kind quickly. I mean, it's something that we do, it is. It is amazing. And the you know, I lie mostly the community is such a great community. And also the Rotary Club of that area is just fantastic, so much kind and open their hearts to our mission. And I think I contact you guys, all of you enough, you know, so just to

keep us going really well, we're gonna have a big event. It's a casino night and it's going to be on Saturday at six thirty pm at timber Oaks Event Venue on Highway sixty right here in bartlesvilm and folks can come out, have fun and help benefit the Afghanistan Girls School that JA has created in

order to provide this education in a bright future. And Rasha, you know, since the last time we spoke, things have changed in Afghanistan quite drastically, but you've been able to navigate locally with the people and the powers that be in order to keep your school open. Many feared that it may gem

may close it, and it didn't. It didn't really, and it's amazing that talibands now for two years, yes, and over two years now, but you know, not one day that they have stopped our van with teachers that come from Cobble and question that where these women are going or our students that are coming in buses. If they never stop so or question us. I think we are very careful how we operate and how we work within this

system. I told the Minister of Education, the new one that is a piet, and I said, you know, I'm a beggar and I want to see what you can put in my play. And I think he was shocked and he said, you know, we give you everything that you want. And so I think that's what's happening. Unfortunately, you know, the seniors from seven to twelfth grade, they have missed two years of their life

of education. But what we have done is that our teachers, two of our teachers every day sits in a van with a bundle of books and they go house to house where our students are from seven to twelfth grade, and they get together in their house and they provide them books. And every two weeks, then they go back and exchange the books. So at least I think we are doing something for these girls who are stuck at home. I think things are not the best, but we have no threats, we have

nothing of that side, and we are okay. You know something right here, I met you and you impressed me as a woman who shows no fear. Well, yeah, I think that's the best thing to do. I mean, what are they going to kill me? One good? Good for them, But I get you know, two years to go. The first time when I went, I went to the airport and I was just getting off and looking for my suitcases, and I saw a young man Talib, standing with a gun in a corner, checking everybody who's coming and was going.

The first thing I did is I went to him and I said, come on here, son, I need your help, come and find my suitcases. And I gave him the tags and he left his gun and he started to look for my suitkads. So he forgot to God and look at who's coming and who's going. So I think we have to find ways to survive, and by engaging is probably the best because you're going to find a

connection point somewhere and you really got a great on. Yeah. As I say all the time, I said, beggars are no choosers, and right now we are beggars and whatever they put in a plate, we take it. And I think we can do things, you know, just the way we want to. But it's a kind of a little different way, you know. So it's been assary. I mean, these kids are going to school and I hope and I pray that I think they are going to allow

the seventh to twelve grade this coming year. Let's hope. So let's hope the girls get back. It's been two years and they need to resume their studies so they can absolutely do everything they can be absolutely. So it's just, you know, this is the world we facing and everywhere you know, there's something going on, and we are one of them, and we are s viving and I think that's what we can do. Well, hopefully we

can turn that survive to thrive. Pretty sure, it's not happy. They have a place to come and we have built this beautiful new school that you know, it's just gordeous awesome for the kids and for the staff, and we have a beautiful area that these girls can go and play and to have games. And so I think we are trying very hard to keep these girls

happy and healthy and help their families. I like the part that you told me earlier that this is not just for the girls, but it is also for the families, also for the widows, for the people at home, because you were telling me that the men in some cases don't have jobs, so the conditions are kind of bleak for everyone in the area. Absolutely, and men are so scared because they were working in different places and they are scared that if they go, you know, continue or whatever, they they

might be taken away or whatever their problems are. So you know, majority men are unemployed, and so we are the one that are trying to help, you know, these widows and and these girls. And we have a program that a lot of widows they work, we give them these they make us little embroidered kites, which again kite is of freedom. You fly and you you know, just go, if the string breaks, you go somewhere

and nobody can stop. So I think this is what we are doing with the girls that who are at home, that they are helping us make these employs as these kites, and then we can give it to our supporters as a thank you and remind them that these girls needs help. So I think it says something that continuously we are trying to help the girls first of all, and then of course their families, and we have you know, organizations like yours and others that help us. And it's amazing what your community is

doing. I can't tang them enough. Well, we thank you, and we can't wait for your arrival. I understand you're coming in I think tomorrow or the next day as we get ready for the big event on the seventh. J has always it has been a deep pleasure for us to have you on our program today. I want to thank you. Can we to come back here in the high school too, because that's very important for our community or your community young people to understand how lucky they are, you know,

but we have made things easy for our students. Do very good, Raja, thank you and bless you, and we will see you very soon here in the next few days in Bartlesville. Thank you, Thank you very much for your health and just your radio station is a start, and thank you thank you for having us all right, bye bye. Now we've been listening to Raja John and she has the Rajah's Ray of Hope School in Afghanistan and it's for girls. And if you're not familiar with how things go and Afghanistan,

well they don't really like women being educated. It's a very different place in the world. So we're doing everything to help keep the doors open of that school in Afghanistan. And so we're having Afghanistan wecan fundraiser October seventh with the Daybreak Rotary and that'll be at timber Oakes Venue, Hiway sixty barn of the film Casino Night. Come on out, have some fun, let's raise some money.

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