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MANGOCHI, Malawi—In a year of little good news, pockets of Malawi are bucking an uncomfortable trend.

A significant number of girls were dropping out of school each year to marry early or give birth, losing the best opportunity they had to carve a better future for themselves. Then came school closures brought about by a national lockdown to stop the spread of COVID-19. For many, the situation worsened.

But not for girls living in the villages of Group Village Head Grace Anafi Mndima, in Traditional Authority Jalasi, Mangochi.

Here, ten women, who endured personal difficulties because they were unable to complete their education, came together to stop this cycle repeating for their own daughters – and for other girls in their respective villages. These mothers know the story only too well. For their daughters’ sake, they wanted to change the downward trajectory. 

Theirs is an inspirational story.

The Mpapa mothers’ group, as they call themselves, set to work. Armed with training by the Joint Programme on Girls Education (JPGE), which is supported by UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, they began to mentor adolescent girls on sexual and reproductive health, including on the dangers of teenage pregnancy and child marriage, and their reproductive rights. They encouraged them to complete their education.


Esther White (seated), chairperson of Mpapa mothers’ group, married early and did not complete her schooling. Here, she and two other members of the group mentor adolescent girls on sexual and reproductive health, to avoid the pitfalls they experienced to completing their education. ©UNFPA/Luis Tato

Joining forces to unblock girls' access to education

A girl who has benefited from the twice monthly mentoring sessions with the mothers’ group is Aisha Kayima, 15, a standard 7 pupil at Mpapa Primary School. “Due to access to the right information, my choices about the future I want are better informed,” she said.

But for many girls, the ability to attend school is not a given. 

Due to access to the right information, my choices about the future I want are better informed.

Esther White, who is chairperson of the Mpapa mothers’ group, explained how they remove obstacles to girls’ education: “We monitor the wellbeing of adolescent girls by ensuring that they attend school daily, and mediate if they have issues that might hinder their access to education,” she said.

In this task, the mothers quickly realised that they would need the wider support of their communities. Nationally, almost one in two girls – or 47 per cent – marries before age 18, bringing their education to an early end. The mothers joined forces with community leaders to rescue girls who had been forced into early marriage or who had become pregnant at a young age. Working together, they helped these girls return to school.

Soon they were seeing results. In 2019, 1120 girls who had dropped out of school in Group Village Head Mndima's area returned to continue their education, according to Cecilia Chinula, Adolescent and Youth Specialist for UNFPA in Malawi.


“I have made a decision to focus on my education so that I can be an independent and empowered woman,” said Aisha. At Mpapa Primary School, the annual drop-out rate for girls was 26 per cent in 2017. By 2020, it had dropped to just 6 per cent. Nationally, only 51 per cent of girls complete primary school. ©UNFPA/Luis Tato

Rescued from marriage, girls and boys go back to school

Along with the village chief, the school administration and other community members, Mpapa’s efforts have also been instrumental in ensuring very low rates of teenage pregnancy and child marriage in their communities.

Through a community-based GBV prevention structure, 55 girls and 17 boys were rescued from forced or early marriage. Just four teenage pregnancies have been recorded in their area to date during the nation’s wrestle with COVID-19.

We provide homemade masks to ensure that adolescent girls and young women continue to attend school and do not use the lack of a mask as an excuse.

Then came the pandemic, presenting a significant threat to their hard-won successes. The Mpapa women’s group were determined to keep girls’ education on track, even if it meant adding a new weapon to their arsenal – that of masks.

“We provide homemade masks to ensure that adolescent girls and young women continue to attend school and do not use the lack of a mask as an excuse,” said Ms. White.

She is pleased that the low child marriage and teen pregnancy rates have been maintained, even during the school closures this year.


“I understand the pain that millions of mothers go through when a child falls into the trap of early marriage or teenage pregnancy,” said Group Village Head Grace Anafi Mndima, who works to end child marriage and teen pregnancies in the villages under her leadership. ©UNFPA/Luis Tato

Leading change for girls, one girl at a time

Group Village Head Mndima has been a champion for their cause.

“I understand the pain that millions of mothers go through when a child falls into the trap of early marriage or teenage pregnancy. I am doing all things possible within my power to ensure that no cases of early child marriage or teenage pregnancy are registered in my community,” she said.

Her work with community groups such as the Mpapa mothers’ group to make this vision a reality has earned her praise.

We want to continue to see good results, so please keep girls in school and ensure that there are no teenage pregnancies or child marriages.

Dr. Julitta Onabanjo, UNFPA Regional Director for East and Southern Africa, recently undertook a trip to the region to understand how community efforts such as the mothers’ group have achieved such impressive results.

“We want to continue to see good results, so please keep girls in school and ensure that there are no teenage pregnancies or child marriages,” she urged Group Village Head Mndima and those working with her to support these efforts.


Girls who stay in school are less vulnerable to child marriage, early pregnancy and gender-based violence. In 2019, 1120 girls who had dropped out of school in Group Village Head Mndima's area were helped to return to school to continue their education. ©UNFPA/Luis Tato

Comprehensive sexuality education reinforces positive messages

Patrick Chibayo is Head Teacher at Mpapa Primary School. He has witnessed a drastic improvement in school retention for girls. At his establishment, life skills are imparted as part of Malawi’s education curriculum, to reinforce positive messages around girl’s education, and sexual and reproductive health and rights.

“Mpapa school has registered good success stories – a low drop-out rate, high attendance among adolescent girls, and low early marriages and teenage pregnancies due to comprehensive sexuality education,” he said.

Mpapa school has registered good success stories – a low drop-out rate, high attendance among adolescent girls, and low early marriages and teenage pregnancies due to comprehensive sexuality education.

Aisha Kayima agrees with this approach to empowering girls and boys while still in school: “We learn about the dangers of teenage pregnancy, early child marriage and early sexual debut,” she said.

At Mpapa Primary School, the drop-out rate has decreased from 26 per cent a year for girls in the 2017 academic year to 6 per cent in 2020. School attendance for adolescent girls increased from 73 per cent in 2014 to 87 per cent in 2019.


Dr. Julitta Onabanjo, UNFPA Regional Director for East and Southern Africa, and Esther White view the reusable pads that the Mpapa mothers' group makes to ensure that schoolgirls can manage their periods with dignity while attending class. ©UNFPA/Luis Tato

Ensuring girls menstruate with dignity while in school

There’s another critical aspect to empowering girls that the Mpapa mothers’ group has assumed willingly – ensuring that girls don’t miss out on school due to their periods.

Using machines provided by JPGE, the mothers make about 20 reusable menstrual pads a day. They provide these for girls at school.

“Every single pad made brings joy into our lives, as we know that girls attending school will manage their periods with dignity, enabling them to continue their education and not have periods as a blockage to their bright future,” said Ms. White.

However, resolving the purely physical management of menstrual health did not take care of all the girls’ needs in this respect. Stigmatization is a reality they also deal with.

For this reason, the women also focus on building a more positive sense of masculinity among schoolboys, imparting to them the need to support girls who are menstruating, instead of laughing at them or making discriminatory remarks. Their approach has changed boys’ attitudes.


Mpapa mothers' group members (from left): Daima Asiki, Esther White and Shakira Nikisi at Mpapa Primary School. ©UNFPA/Luis Tato

“Through life skills and mentorship sessions provided to us by Mpapa mothers’ group, I have learnt not to stigmatize adolescent girls and young women during their periods,” said Sam Loganie, 17, a standard 7 pupil at Mpapa Primary School. 

This community endeavour to empower girls, together with the support of JPGE, is reaping rewards.

Through life skills and mentorship sessions, I have learnt not to stigmatize adolescent girls and young women during their periods.

“I have made a decision to focus on my education so that I can be an independent and empowered woman,” said Aisha.

It is precisely this that the Mpapa mothers’ group intended to foster – a new generation of young women who are empowered to reach for and achieve their potential, unhindered by the traps of child marriage, teen pregnancy and school drop-out.

Their combined efforts are testimony to the African proverb that “It takes a village to raise a child.”

* With the support of the Government of Norway, the Joint Programme on Girls’ Education (JPGE) is being implemented by UNFPA, UNICEF and the World Food Programme in 169 schools in the districts of Dedza, Mangochi and Salima. It aims to improve access to, quality and relevance of education for girls, through addressing the key known threats to girls’ education. These include poor food and nutrition, inadequate protection against sexual and physical violence, poor quality schooling, harmful social and traditional practices, and the violation of girls’ sexual and reproductive health and rights.