August 11, 2005
Tajikistan: Teen Uses School As Springboard To A Better Life
Firuz Arimzoda
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Stories about children in Tajikistan often focus on their hardships. The Central Asian nation has some of the worst poverty rates in the former Soviet Union. Thousands of children each year are forced onto the street, giving up school in order to earn money any way they can. But not every story is so bleak. As the UN marks International Youth Day on 12 August with a pledge to guarantee quality schooling for young people around the world, RFE/RL correspondent Firuz Barotov met one 13-year-old boy in Dushanbe who puts learning first -- and is determined to help all Tajik children get the education they deserve.
Dushanbe, 11 August 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Like most serious students, Firuz Arimzoda keeps a grueling schedule.
The teenager -- who speaks Tajik, Russian, and Turkish, and is now studying English -- admits it's not always easy to settle in for two hours of homework after a full day at school.
"Sometimes, when I have to study my languages, I feel tired, like I don't want to do it, like I don't like it," he says. "But once I tell myself that I have to do it, then I want to."
That self-discipline has already allowed Firuz to skip two grades at the Tajik-Turkish College, a respected school in the capital Dushanbe. In September, he will begin ninth grade.