Harman Patil (Editor)

Centre d'Enseignement Français en Afghanistan

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Type
  
Public

Number of students
  
5,700

Teaching staff
  
300

Established
  
1922

Founded
  
1922

Address
  
Ebn-e-Sina, Kabul, Afghanistan

Similar
  
Amani High School, Esteqlal high school, Aryana Afghan‑T High Sch, Zarghona High School, Habibiya High School

The Centre d'Enseignement Français en Afghanistan (CEFA) consists of two Franco-Afghan schools in Kabul, Afghanistan, together educating around 6,000 Afghan students.

Contents

The Lycée Esteqlal (Persian: لیسه استقلال‎‎ English: Esteqlal High School) is a Franco-Afghan school in Kabul, Afghanistan. It is the second oldest school (after Habibia High School) in Kabul, and was recognized as one of the prestigious schools in the country.

Lycée Esteqlal is a public school, administered by the Afghan Ministry of Education, and is currently under the contract of AEFE, an educational agency of the French Foreign Ministry. The French Cultural Center (CCF) is also located inside the Lycée Esteqlal compound.

Further information

Created under the impulse of King Amanullah in 1922 as Amaniya School, it was renamed in 1931 to Lycée Esteqlal (meaning "independence" in Persian). In 1968, French Prime Minister Georges Pompidou laid the first brick of modern buildings, and the new site was inaugurated in 1974. The curriculum was entirely in the French language until 1985 when diplomatic relations between France and Afghanistan were suspended under the communist regime. Since 2002, only a few subjects, such as French language, mathematics and physics, are taught in French, and the rest in Dari.

Until 1985, Lycée Esteqlal did not only receive Afghan students, but also several French nationals who were related to the French Embassy's diplomatic staff. Lycée Esteqlal along with Lycée Malalaï (Persian: لیسه ملالی‎‎), which is the other Franco-Afghan school for girls in Kabul were rebuilt and reopened at the beginning of 2003, and currently they are under the contract of Agence pour l'enseignement français à l'étranger.

King Amanullah, who was progressive and democratic also oversaw the opening of the first girls school, Masturat, in 1921. Masturat was closed between 1928 and 1932, then reopened in 1932 through the efforts of the new King Nadir Shah and became a girls secondary school in 1939, led by a French teacher. Seven hours a week of French was taught from the primary year upwards. In 1942, the school moved to a new building and took the name of Lycée Malalai, from the name of a famous Afghan woman who fought in the resistance against the invading English in 1880 during the Second Anglo-Afghan War.

In 2014 a suicide bomber attacked a cultural centre at Istiqlal High School, killing a German national and injuring 16. One of the injured was musician Ahmad Naser Sarmast.

Notable alumni

Many internationally renowned Afghan personalities and figures have received part of their education or have obtained their Baccalaureate in Lycée Esteqlal.

  • Ahmad Shah Massoud, the renowned Afghan anti-Soviet resistance leader, did his Secondary education in Lycée Esteqlal
  • Ravan A. G. Farhâdi, the former Ambassador to the United Nations for Afghanistan, and a renowned writer, researcher and scholar in Persian literature. He has also been a professor at Sorbonne University and at University of California, Berkeley.
  • Zalmai Rassoul, current Afghan foreign affairs minister
  • Zemaryalai Tarzi, an internationally renowned archaeologist, and a professor at the University of Strasbourg
  • Atiq Rahimi, a well-known French-Afghan writer
  • Amin Wardak, mujahideen leader from Wardak province
  • Eklil Ahmad Hakimi, former Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Mahmoud Saikal, current Permanent Representative to the United Nations for Afghanistan
  • References

    Centre d'Enseignement Français en Afghanistan Wikipedia