Stories of Change

From Surrender to School: Sourbadjo’s Story

From Surrender to School: Sourbadjo’s Story

From Surrender to School: Sourbadjo’s Story

From Vulnerability to Protection:
The Women Who Strengthened Child Safety in Kairouan

Location

Kairouan, Tunisia

Focus

Reintegration

IMplemented by

Ifrikya Center for Common Ground (ICCG)

Screenshot 2026-07-09 150708

In Kairouan, the “Mon École Attractive, Ouverte et Inclusive” project turned early warning into early action — equipping women from the community to identify risks, support vulnerable children, and prevent school dropout and violence before they escalated, creating safer and more inclusive learning environments.

Through the “Mon École Attractive, Ouverte et Inclusive” project, women in rural Tunisia are becoming trusted focal points within their schools — helping problems surface early, before they can grow.

In a small village outside Kairouan, a quiet shift began. Schools that once let problems surface too late started becoming places where they were noticed early.

Women from the community — many of them mothers, neighbours, or relatives of students — were trained as trusted focal points linked to local schools. They were people children already knew and trusted. For the first time, they had the tools and support to act when something felt wrong.

When two orphaned brothers began showing signs of anger and withdrawal after a violent incident in their neighbourhood, a female focal point noticed the change before it could turn into school violence or dropout. She connected them to psychosocial support and stayed close to the family in the weeks that followed.

The boys remained in school. And the spiral toward revenge stopped before it began.

In another school, a young girl on the verge of dropping out due to persistent bullying was identified early. Instead of disappearing from the classroom, she received counselling and support. She stayed. Her confidence returned.

For the women involved, the change was personal as well. Once silent observers, they became recognised protectors of children and mediators in crisis. As one focal point reflected:

I no longer wait for things to explode. I see the signs early—and I know I can act.”

— Woman, Focal Point

By strengthening trust around schools and giving communities the confidence to intervene early, Madrasty helped turn everyday care into prevention—protecting children not with force, but with attention, dialogue and presence.

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