Rural and ethnic communities set to launch expansive literacy campaign soon

People marching towards building the Union based on democratic and federal systems must be literate and complete school education.

 

A Coordination meeting on the liter­acy campaign to be launched for the people from rural regions and ethnic areas took place at the State Adminis­tration Council Chairman Office yesterday, with an address by SAC Vice-Chairman Deputy Prime Minister Vice-Senior General Soe Win.

 

In retrospect, the Vice-Sen­ior General who is also in the capacity of Chairman of the Education, Health and Human Resources Development Com­mittee said that, although the literacy rate was high in Myan­mar’s monarchical era due to the encouragement of Myan­mar’s monarchs and teaching of Buddhist monks, such a rate declined to 35 per cent in the co­lonial eras of British and Japan.

 

 

He continued that the 2019 interim population indicates some 4.1 million illiterates above 15 years old across the nation. The number of women illiterates in regions and states is larger than the number of men illiterates.

 

The Vice-Senior General underlined that only when the people are literate will they have adequate knowledge to analyze the persuasion of oth­ers. The literates will have a keenness to read literature. If so, they will have the knowl­edge to adjust all things for themselves and their society. The terrorist acts happening in some townships and border areas of the country depend on consequences of 4.1 million illiterates above 15 years old people according to the 2019 interim population, he added.

 

As such, he recounted that at the Union government meet­ing 4/2023 held on 30 August 2023, the Prime Minister gave guidance that as literacy and school education of the ethnic people including rural residents were weak, the committee was instructed to implement the lit­eracy campaign for them.

 

The Vice-Senior General highlighted that at a time when the State and the people are marching to build the Union based on democratic and fed­eral systems, those who will implement the system of the country and follow it need to become literate and complete school education. And, as ethnic people need to have skills in Myanmar language as an offi­cial language, the literacy cam­paign was staged, he added.

 

Union Minister for Edu­cation Dr Nyunt Pe reported on plans to implement the ba­sic literacy campaign by the ministry, provision of teaching aid and assistance for super­visors whereas the dignitaries discussed the participation of relevant ministries in the lit­eracy campaign.

 

UNESCO also recognized the mass literacy campaign of Myanmar, awarding the Mo­hammad Reza Pahlavi Prize to Myanmar on 8 September 1971 when International Liter­acy Day was marked.

 

Moreover, as Sayagyi U Thaung Tun submitted the Burmese Way to Literacy at the literacy conference held in West Berlin, Germany in 1984 and disseminated the informa­tion on the mass movement of Myanmar’s literacy campaign without budget to the world, elders’ text for international literacy campaign and publi­cations, the UNESCO awarded Noma literacy prize to Myan­mar as a wonderful victory of Myanmar. — MNA/TTA