Nahom doesn’t talk much about his family’s journey fleeing war in northern Ethiopia. He was too young to do much of the walking. For hundreds of miles, he was carried, passed among his mother, father and uncles as his family desperately tried to reach safety.
“Everything happened suddenly,” recalls Nahom’s mother Shishay. “There was shooting and we didn’t know what to do. The only possibility was to leave home... It was difficult. We traveled from village to village on foot.”
After several months, Nahom’s family arrived in Mekelle—the capital of the Tigray region. Nahom is one of over 1 million internally displaced people in Tigray. From 2020 to 2022, war devastated the region and disrupted education for millions of children, leaving over 1.5 million children out of school for 3 years.
“I remember the sound of shooting and feeling afraid,” says Nahom quietly.
Relaunching accelerated learning in Tigray
After a peace agreement was announced, the Luminos Fund moved quickly to relaunch our education program in Tigray in partnership with the Tigray Regional Education Bureau, building on our long history of operating in the region prior to the conflict. Luminos commissioned a study to help inform how to tailor our program to the unique learning needs of children now.
The study highlighted the impact of the war, with alarming results. There was evidence of significant learning loss and deep psychological trauma among children, parents and teachers. Survey responses indicated 62% of children expected that they would be killed and 72% experienced shooting at a very close range. In the words of Dr. Kiros Guesh, Head of Tigray’s Regional Education Bureau, “Many of our children have seen all the evils.”
Our students’ well-being is the heart of everything we do at Luminos. In response to the study results and in addition to joyful, foundational learning, our Tigray program includes: trauma-healing support, an emphasis on socio-emotional learning and midday meals to address the significant food insecurity in the region.