Malala met Najlaa and other Yazidi girls in Iraqi-Kurdistan this summer. (Credit: Malin Fezahai)

Najlaa overcame forced marriage and terrorists, but getting to school is still difficult.

Malala Fund
Malala Fund - archive
2 min readDec 18, 2017

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Malala met 19-year-old Najlaa in Iraqi-Kurdistan this summer. Najlaa told Malala about the many barriers she faced in going to school: her family, child marriage and even ISIS.

Now Najlaa is free from these threats, but getting to school is still not easy.

Read Najlaa’s story in her own words:

Najlaa on her long walk to school in Iraqi Kurdistan.

My name is Najlaa. I am 19 years old. I am Yazidi from Iraq.

When I was 14 years old, I was taken out of school and told that I must marry. I didn’t know anything about the man — I didn’t ask. I knew that I was too young.

I tried for weeks to convince my parents that I shouldn’t marry. It didn’t work. So I ran away on my wedding day, still in my wedding dress. I took off my heels so I could run faster.

Girls should be students, not brides.

My education has not been easy. Three years ago, terrorists invaded our village in the middle of the night and my family had to flee. My brother and I were both shot.

I am now back in school, but I have to walk over an hour each way. I go to school because I hope to become a journalist. I walk with other girls — each one with her own dream.

Help fund a school bus for Najlaa and her friends. With your support, their path to the classroom — and to achieving their dreams — will be easier.

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Malala Fund
Malala Fund - archive

Led by Malala Yousafzai, Malala Fund champions every girl's right to 12 years of free, safe, quality education. Learn more at malala.org.