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                witnessed how education can change lives. When people have access to quality learning,
                they  become  more  aware  and  productive.  Education  does  not  just  help  individuals  it

                strengthens entire communities. I have seen how educated people contribute to society,

                making it better for everyone. One of the biggest lessons I have learned is that education
                opens doors. It increases the chances of getting good jobs and financial stability, not just

                for me but for future generations as well despite all the benefits, I know many children

                who still don’t have access to quality education. The biggest challenges are poverty, lack
                of schools, untrained teachers, and expensive education. I believe education should be

                free and accessible to all. It should not be a privilege for a few but a necessity just like
                food and water. Every child deserves the chance to learn, grow, and create a better future.

                Quality education has molded my life in ways I never imagined. It has given me the tools
                to improve myself and dream big. By ensuring that every child gets a chance to learn, we

                can build a brighter, more equal world.


               (Urwah Danish, IX-C Rose)




                Short Story: A Journey Beyond the Sky




               She stood in the abyss of the marketplace; her chador draped around her ears from her

                head to her toes submerged in dirt and wilt. Her footprints marked the long and cranny

                streets of Kabul; however, her imagination took steps and leaped to unimaginable places.
                The cruel summer heat makes passersby tremble and quiver in its wrath, yet she still

                stands strong and tall gleaming above them all, for it is not the ground nor her feet that
                make her able to mark these rallies. Her dreams and hope are what carry her through

                these rallies.


               Fatima Wahdati, the daughter of a merchant and a sister to five brothers, was truly one

                of a kind, her days spent at school gleaming over the blackboard as small as her cooking
                pan, breathing in the air clouded with smoke and chalk and her nights drenched in sweat
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