This North Syrian School Is a Baby Step Toward a Blockchain Society

Rachel-Rose O’Leary is a reporter at CoinDesk covering how cryptocurrencies are being used in areas of economic, social and political unrest. This article is part of her series from Rojava, Syria.

“It’s a first for Rojava and a first for the Middle East.”

That’s how 22-year-old programming student Mohamed Abdullah describes the Open Academy – a new school in North Syria, a de-facto autonomous region also known as Rojava.

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The Open Academy is tackling one of the region’s greatest hurdles: the lack of education for young people as result of the Syrian Civil War.

North Syria achieved partial autonomy from Damascus in 2012. Since then, it has pioneered a form of government known as democratic confederalism and led the offensive against ISIS, the militant jihadist group that once held huge portions of Iraq and Syria.

“I had to pass through ISIS-held areas to get to university,” Abdullah told me, “I saw a lot of terrible things. They say the best part of life is university, but we didn’t live it as that.”

North Syria has been researching how technologies such as blockchain could complement its societal model, which is built on an ethos of decentralization.

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Many of the students of the Open Academy are curious about bitcoin and blockchain, believing it offers dependability after years of turmoil.

“I don’t trust the Syrian pound, I don’t trust the American dollar, they are just paper. But bitcoin yes, we can trust it,” Abdullah said.

Before the war, Damascus forbade the Kurds from learning their own language and suppressed tech education. Schools adopted a highly authoritarian style, and corporal punishment was common.

Kurdish students can now study Kurdish, but North Syria’s education system has a lot of catching up to do in the tech field. Before delivering on blockchain projects, students need to master the basics of coding, all while coping with limited resources and the constant threat of conflict.

“This is a long development. It will take years,” says Redur Daristan, an electronics student from Afrin.

Decentralized politics

A Raspberry Pi and a copy of George Orwell’s Animal Farm

In the past six months, North Syria’s government has established learning centers across the territory (home to about 20 million people), each providing free tuition in tech and philosophy.

As well as studying code, students work through a reading list of world history and cultural theory, and the works of Kurdish ideologue Abdullah Ocalan, the imprisoned Kurdish leader who inspired the North Syrian revolution.