Pakistan’s school for transgenders set to open its doors

Weekly Voice editorial staff
1 Min Read
In this Tuesday, May 31, 2016 photo, Pakistani transgender guru Farzana, right, tells what happened to her colleague Alisha who was killed in Peshawar, Pakistan. Alisha was shot five times allegedly by her boyfriend who has since been arrested. She died of her wounds three days after being admitted to hospital. Her friends say she was neglected by doctors and medical professionals, who taunted her, rather than treated her. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)

Lahore: A school for the education and vocational training of Pakistan’s transgender community is set to open its doors from April 15 in Lahore, the media reported on Friday.

- Advertisement -

Named “The Gender Guardian”, the school offers a full 12 years of academic education from the primary level to matriculation, and then leading up to college, Dawn reported.

The school will also impart technical education, such as fashion designing, beautician and hair styling courses, graphic designing, computer and mobile repairing, among others.

Asif Shahzad, the school’s founder, told Dawn it has been built in collaboration with an NGO and two more such schools will be established in Islamabad and Karachi.

- Advertisement -

The management said that more than 40 aspiring students from the transgender community have already registered with the soon-to-be operational school.

The school will be formally launched through an opening ceremony at Gaddafi Stadium Lahore’s Alhamra Hall, with several names from the showbiz industry expected to attend.

Share This Article