Story originally published on Education Cannot Wait in September 2020. For updated analysis view Education Cannot Wait's 2019 Annual Report.
Special Contribution by Rebecca Crombleholme, Norwegian Refugee Council Uganda (Original Story)
He fled South Sudan with nothing, but as soon as he arrived in Uganda he began teaching. Dugale believes in the next generation, and he will stop at nothing until every child can return to their community ready to face the future.
“I have lost a lot of things,” he says, “but when I enter the classroom, I leave all that behind me. I teach like I would normally, and I am free.”
Dugale Severy is 38 years old. He began his teaching career in his hometown, in South Sudan, straight after leaving university. Throughout his own schooling, he benefitted from teachers who made things clear, and this gave him the courage to learn more. Teaching, he says, is his way of serving others.
“I love teaching,” Dugale says with a smile. “When you are a teacher, you can help everybody without borders. I want to inspire my students to become teachers themselves so that they can help other refugee children.”
Dugale now teaches on the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Accelerated Education Programme in Nyumanzi Settlement, Uganda. Many of his students have lost loved ones and missed out on many years of school; They all have been forced to flee their homes.
This is something Dugale understands, as he too was forced to flee.