Dahiru Bauchi foundation seeks for inclusion of critical stakeholders in Almajiri Commission

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From Ahmad saka,Bauchi
The Sheikh Dahiru Usman Bauchi Foundation has called the National Almajiri Commission to include genuine known Almajiri critical stakeholders in all its programmes and its implementation.
A statement signed by the Director Media and Publicity of the Foundation Mallam Ahmad Muhammad which was distributed to reporters in Bauchi said that “the long-term success of ongoing national efforts surrounding Almajiri and Out-of-School Children education in Nigeria will depend not only on policy formulation, but also on the extent to which such efforts are connected to trusted community-rooted structures already operating within the affected ecosystem.”
The statement expressed worry over non inclusion of real critical stakeholders in the programmes and activities of the commission ,instead the commission many times carry people that has little or those that has no connection what so ever with the Almajiri system of education.
The Statement tittle ” sustainable Almajiri reforms require community rooted implementation structures “was written not to apportion blame but to draw the attention of the commission officials to do their activities in order to succeed
The Foundation said that the Almajiri and out-of-school children challenge remains a deeply social and community-based issue that extends beyond administrative frameworks alone, and explained that it’s implementation, continuity, acceptance, and sustainability can only be effectively achieved with  institutions with established grassroots legitimacy and direct operational experience are meaningfully carried along.
The Foundation explained  that while recent national engagements on Almajiri and Out-of-School Children reforms have continued to bring together various political, administrative, developmental, and community actors, there remains a growing need for stronger institutional inclusion of longstanding grassroots educational structures and community-rooted stakeholders directly operating within the Almajiri and Tsangaya ecosystem itself.
 Foundation statement said that” sustainable reform efforts may face implementation limitations where strategic frameworks are developed without sufficient engagement with institutions that possess longstanding operational presence, established community trust, and direct practical experience within the affected communities — a gap the Foundation believes must be meaningfully addressed within the broader national conversation surrounding Almajiri and Out-of-School Children reforms in Nigeria.
The statement explained that decades of engagement within the Tsangaya, Almajiri, and broader out-of-school children ecosystem across Northern Nigeria have consistently shown that reforms disconnected from existing community realities often struggle with long-term acceptance and implementation at the grassroots level.
The Foundation said that institutions already embedded within the ecosystem possess not only operational structures, but also community confidence, parental trust, and practical implementation experience developed over several decades of direct engagement.
Director Media said “With an extensive network of over 800 Tsangaya institutions and affiliated schools currently serving more than 300,000 students across the country, the Foundation stated that practical and community-rooted educational models remain critical to addressing both the Almajiri phenomenon and the wider out-of-school children challenge in a sustainable manner”.
He said the importance of integrated educational approaches capable of combining Qur’anic education, formal learning, moral development, and social stability within the same framework, noting that such models continue to provide socially accepted alternatives within affected communities.
Director Media explained that “These concerns and observations were formally conveyed by the Chairman of the Foundation, Khalifa Sayyadi Ibrahim Sheikh Dahiru Usman Bauchi, in a letter he sent to the National Commission for Almajiri and Out-of-School Children Education (NCAOOSCE), which was copied to President  Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the National Security Adviser,where the Foundation reiterated its support for the Commission’s ongoing efforts and stressed needs and the importance of deeper institutional engagement with longstanding community-based educational structures.
He said “From our standpoint as an institution that has remained directly engaged within the realities of the Almajiri and Tsangaya ecosystem for decades, we believe the broader national conversation must now move beyond recognition of the challenge alone toward building stronger implementation relationships with trusted grassroots structures already operating within the sector.”
“Any framework that seeks to succeed in this sector must therefore recognize the importance of institutions already accepted by the people and already working within the system. The realities surrounding the Almajiri and Tsangaya ecosystem cannot be addressed effectively in isolation from the communities, structures, and longstanding institutions that have continued to operate directly within that reality for decades.”
“The Sheikh Dahiru Usman Bauchi Foundation believes that stronger alignment between national reform efforts and trusted grassroots structures will significantly strengthen implementation, continuity, acceptance, and long-term sustainability within the sector. The issue is no longer merely about identifying the challenge, but about building implementation frameworks capable of reaching the people through institutions and structures they already trust and identify with.’
“As conversations surrounding Almajiri and Out-of-School Children reforms continue nationally, the Foundation maintains that meaningful institutional inclusion, practical engagement, and community-rooted collaboration will remain essential to achieving lasting impact within the sector.”
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