A 90-year-old Kenyan
woman who goes to class with six of her great-great-grandchildren is
believed to be the oldest primary school pupil in the world.
Sitting at the front of class four in her school uniform,
Priscilla Sitienei listens intently while she writes the English names
of animals in her notebook.Priscilla Sitienei: "I want to inspire children" |
Ms Sitienei says she wants to inspire children who do not go to school |
Ms Sitienei wants to pass on local customs and her knowledge of herbal medicine |
“Start Quote
I want to say to the children of the world, especially girls, that education will be your wealth”
Affectionately known as "Gogo",
which means grandmother in the local Kalenjin language, she says at 90
she is finally learning to read and write - an opportunity she never had
as a child.
More comfortable speaking in Kalenjin than English, she explains why she wanted to return to school. "I'd like to be able to read the Bible; I also want to inspire children to get an education.
"Too many older children are not in school. They even have children themselves."
Gogo says she confronts children who are not in school and asks them why.
"They tell me they are too old," she says, "I tell them, 'Well I am at school and so should you.'
"I see children who are lost, children who are without fathers, just going round and round, hopeless. I want to inspire them to go to school."
'Very proud' At first the school turned her away but soon understood how committed she was to learning.
Headmaster David Kinyanjui believes Gogo, who boards at the village school, is an example to the rest of her class. Expectant mothers still seek out Ms Sitienei, who has been a midwife for 65 years
The children sit and listen to every word she says.
An 11-year-old girl says she is Gogo's best friend "because she tells us stories and we go to PE together".
A 10-year-old schoolboy says the grandmother also likes to keep them in order.
"We love Gogo because when we make noise she tells us to keep quiet," he says.
Record breaker The current record for oldest primary school pupil in the Guinness Book of Records is held by another Kenyan, the late Kimani Maruge.
He went to school at the age of 84 in 2004 and died five years later.
The primary school in Ndalat says it will write to the record keepers to inform them about their 90-year-old student.
Gogo says she also wanted to learn how to read and write so she could help pass on her midwifery skills and write down her knowledge of herbal medicines.
Expectant mothers still come to see her - usually on Saturdays - and she has been known to assist in births in her dormitory, which she shares with one of her great-great-grandchildren.
"I want to say to the children of the world, especially girls, that education will be your wealth, don't look back and run to your father," she says.
"With education you can be whatever you want, a doctor, lawyer or a pilot."
Gogo's own lesson is that it is never too late."
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