After a long period of violence and law upheaval, life in Libya returns back to normalcy gradually. With the opening of different schools in Benghazi, children are able to go back to their studies which was abandoned since the beginning of the civil war.
The classrooms were seen packed and the children were found enchanting the rebel songs and reading the ancient Beber scripts.
Children sing Berber songs in the courtyard of a school in Jadu, in the Jabal Nafusa mountains, July 10, 2011. In a packed classroom on a cool evening near the front line in Libya's civil war, 15-year-old Mira is teaching children to spell out the names of animals in the ancient Berber script, an act that once could have landed her in one of Muammar Gaddafi's jails. Picture taken July 10, 2011. To match feature.
REUTERS
Children attend a Berber lesson in a school in Jadu, in the Jabal Nafusa mountains, July 10, 2011. In a packed classroom on a cool evening near the front line in Libya's civil war, 15-year-old Mira is teaching children to spell out the names of animals in the ancient Berber script, an act that once could have landed her in one of Muammar Gaddafi's jails. Picture taken July 10, 2011.
REUTERS
Libyan children play inside their class in Al-Majd school in Benghazi May 10, 2011. After two months of conflict linked to this year's uprisings in other Arab countries, rebels hold Benghazi and other towns in the east while the government controls the capital and almost all of the west of the North African state.
REUTERS
Libyan children stand near the window of their classroom in Al-Majd school in Benghazi May 10, 2011. After two months of conflict linked to this year's uprisings in other Arab countries, rebels hold Benghazi and other towns in the east while the government controls the capital and almost all of the west of the North African state.
REUTERS
File Photo
Reuters
Libyan school children hold a picture of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi at the playground in al Djil Attahadi primary school in Tripoli May 29, 2011.
REUTERS