Her education our future - film

Story

How education transformed the lives of four girls in Brazil, Pakistan and Tanzania

Girls’ education is a matter of human rights. And it is also a smart investment that allows the entire society to thrive. That is the core message of the new documentary film entitled ‘Her Education, Our Future’, produced by CGTN in partnership with UNESCO.

The film tells the inspiring story of four girls on three continents - Anee from Pakistan, Mkasi from the United Republic of Tanzania, and Fabiana and Tainá from Brazil – whose lives were impacted by the transformative power of education. 

Through UNESCO programmes in these countries, the girls were able to access education, enhance their skills for life and work, and expand their learning and career opportunities.  

Meet Anee from Pakistan

Anee Zahra is from Gilgit-Baltistan, a sparsely populated high-mountain area in the north of Pakistan. 

Anee-Pakistan

She dropped out of school as her parents couldn’t afford her education – only that of her brothers. 

Anee-Pakistan

Her father also didn’t believe that girls should be educated but rather stay home and help their mothers. 

Anee-Pakistan

Anee was reached out to through UNESCO’s Girls’ Right to Education programme. It is the Organization’s largest programme on girls’ education, and has covered 19 of Pakistan’s most isolated and marginalized districts. 

Anee-Pakistan

UNESCO assisted Anee’s family to overcome the financial barriers to her education, and addressed other challenges she was facing. 

Anee-Pakistan

Her parents have re-enrolled her in school, and are supporting her to continue her education. Anee wants to be a doctor – the dream she has held since she was a child.

Anee-Pakistan

In addition to Anee, UNESCO has supported almost 60,000 girls to enroll and continue their education through its Girls’ Right to Education Programme in Pakistan. 

Anee-Pakistan

Meet Mkasi from the United Republic of Tanzania

Mkasi Saidi Ali is from Pemba, a Tanzanian island forming part of the Zanzibar Archipelago. She is the sixth of eleven children. 

Mkasi-Tanzania

She left school in 2014, as she didn’t score well enough on her exams to continue to secondary school. 

Mkasi-Tanzania

Mkasi was connected by a District Social Welfare Officer to the UNESCO-UNFPA-UN Women Joint Programme on empowering adolescent girls and young women through education. 

Mkasi-Tanzania

She enrolled into a community-based entrepreneurship and alternative education programme supported by UNESCO that enabled her to gain new vocational skills.

Mkasi-Tanzania

The young woman now works as a seamstress, and makes handicrafts and soap which she sells at the market. 

Mkasi-Tanzania

She wants to become a designer and to open a clothing store – the first in her area – and sell her soap locally and abroad. 

Mkasi-Tanzania

Mkasi is financially independent now, with skills “that I’ll carry with me wherever I go.” UNESCO built the literacy,  technical and vocational skills of nearly 700 young women like Mkasi and connected them to village loans to strengthen their economic autonomy.  

Mkasi-Tanzania

Meet Fabiana and Tainá from Brazil

Fabiana Machado De Souza is in secondary school in Catu. 

Fabiana-Brasil

Tainá Caldas is a university student from Ilhéus. 

Taina-Brasil

They both have a keen interest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education but have faced different barriers to pursuing studies in these fields. 

Taina-Brasil

Fabiana must wake up at four every morning to go to school on a road which is plagued with robberies targeting students and passengers. 

Fabiana-Brasil

Tainá has faced racism and discrimination, and went through a rebellious phase in her teenage years which took her away from her studies and down a harmful path before finding her way back. 

Taina-Brasil

Both Fabiana and Tainá have been engaged in UNESCO’s EDUCASTEM2030 programme, which aims to close gender gaps in STEM education. 

Fabiana-Brasil

Through this initiative, they have been connected to mentors and role models, expanded their skills and gained confidence in their abilities.

Taina-Brasil

Fabiana has a full scholarship to study production engineering – the same studies that Tainá is currently pursuing. 

Fabiana-Brasil

Tainá is also a student leader now, sharing her own story and building more pathways for girls in STEM in Brazil. UNESCO has empowered nearly 3,000 students like her with digital and STEM skills, and exposed them to role models from Brazil and beyond. 

Taina-Brasil

UNESCO certified over 400 teachers to deliver gender-transformative STEM education so that all girls like Fabiana can follow educational paths in STEM. 

Fabiana-Brasil

The premiere screening of the documentary film ‘Her Education, Our Future’ took place on 7 March at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris ahead of International Women's Day.