Sakena Yacoobi
Sakena Yacoobi was born in Herat, Afghanistan. She is the executive director of the Afghan Institute of Learning. An NGO led by the women ...

http://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2014/03/sakena-yacoobi.html
Sakena Yacoobi was
born in Herat, Afghanistan. She is the executive director of the Afghan
Institute of Learning. An NGO led by the women of the country that she founded
in the year 1995.
source of picture: muslimvoices.org
Afghan Institute of
Learning
This organization was
found to provide the teacher training to the women of the country, so aid the
educations for the the boys and the girls and also to supply health education
for the women and the children of the country. Under the leadership of Sakena,
AIL has brought itself to be seen as the groundbreaking, visionary organization
that serves at the local level and empowers the women of the communities of the
country to seek for ways to drive education and health services to the rural
and the urban girls, women and other poor people and the disenfranchised
members of the society. The organization aided 80 underground home schools for
300 girls in the country subsequent to the Taliban closed girls’ school in the
1990s. the organization was the first that opened the learning center for the
women of the country. The organization has trained 10,000 teachers since it was
founded.
Sakena Yacoobi
Born in Herat, Sakena
came to the U.S in the 1970s and there she gained a bachelor’s degree in the
biological science from the University of the Pacific. And she gained her
master’s degree in public health from the Loma Linda University. Before going
back to her country in the year 1990 to serve the people of her country, she
was a professor at the D’Etre University as well as a health consultant. While
she was working with the refugees in Pakistan, she authored and published eight
teacher training guides in Dari language. At the period, she also worked as the
agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief (ACBAR) delegate working on the
portion of education of the UN’s rehabilitation plans for the people of
Afghanistan.
With the use of grassroots
patterns and holistic method, AIL now serves 350,000 women and children every
year via the training programs it ids giving to the people, the educational
learning centers, the schools and the clinic in both Afghanistan and in Pakistan.
Since the year 1996, more than 7,700,000 people of the country have had a good
taste from the organization’s education and health programs.
Sakena is also
co-founder and the vice president of the Creating Hope International, which is
a Michigan based NPO. She is a member of the Board of Directores of the Global
Fund for Women. Sakena is an advisor to Peter and Patricia Gruber Foundation.
Sakena is the advisor to Women’s Learning Patnership (WLP) and also she is a
member of WLP’s Roaming Institute for Women’s Leadership. She is a member and a
past steering committee member of the Agency Co-ordination Body for Afghani
Relief.
Recognition
In
toting to her work with AIL, Sakena has remained a panelist and speaker on
education for ladies and
children at variety of international conferences, as well as the Clinton global Initiative, California Governor’s
Conference on women and Families, the Central Eurasian Studies Society conference
at Harvard University, the One World Forum
at Earl of Warwick University in England,
Association for women in Development
in Bangkok, and also the International
Institute for Peace Education in South Korea,
Turkey, Balkan country and Central American country. She has been instrumental in focusing attention on the urgent desire for women’s rights and education and health care in Afghanistan
Sakena and AIL have
gained international recognition for
their efforts on behalf of
Afghan women and
kids. In 2001, Sakena was
awarded the Bill Graham award from the Rex Foundation in gratitude of the
efforts of the Afghan Institute of learning to
help kids UN
agency square
measure victims of political
oppression and human rights violations. AIL and Dr. Yacoobi are the co-recipients of the
2003 Peacemakers in Action Award of the Tanenbaum Center for Inter-religious
Understanding and
also the 2004 Women’s Rights
Prize of the Peter Gruber Foundation. Sakena and AIL have gained recognition of service awards from the
Ministry of Education in herat, Afghanistan, the
district governments of Mir Bacha Kot, Shakardara, Kalakan, Farza, and sixth
district Kabul, Afghanistan and from various Afghan organizations.
In 2005, Prof.
Yacoobi was bestowed
the Democracy Award from the National Endowment for Democracy. Sakena was among
the one thousand women appointed to collectively receive the 2005 altruist Peace Prize. In 2006,
Sakena received the subject Leader Award from the
University of the Pacific in Frank
Stockton, California and
also the Skoll Award for
Social Entrepreneurship. In January 2007, Sakena was
inducted as a Senior Fellow, the
primary Ashoka Fellow from Asian country. In May 2007, Sakena was
awarded associate
degree unearned academic
degree of laws by the
University of the Pacific for her leadership and human rights work for women and kids. In Dec 2007, Sakena received
the 2007 Gleitsman International Activist Award at Harvard University. In June 2008, Sakena received an honorary Doctor of
Humanitarian Service degree from Loma Linda University, recognizing her
distinguished contribution to society. In February 2009, Sakena received
the 2009 Americans for UNFPA Board of Advocates Award for the Health and
Dignity of
women. Sakena was cited by
Americans for UNPFA as a tireless advocate for Afghan women, World Health
Organization has accrued the accomplishment and improved the
health of thousands of Afghan women and girls despite decades of
armed conflict and a ban on girls’ education throughout Taliban rule. In March 2009,
Sakena was given the Henry R. Kravis Prize in Leadership for her outstanding
work. In 2010, Sakena received the Jonathan Mann Award for Global Health and Human
Rights, and
also the Asia Social entrepreneur of the Year Award
given by the Schwab Foundation. Yacoobi was one
among the one thousand women worldwide that was jointly appointed for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2005. She was elected as an Ashoka Fellow in
2006, recognizing her leading work as a social enterpriser. In 2007, Yacoobi received the Gleitsman
International Activist Award from Center for Public Leadership
at Harvard's JFK School of Government