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“First School, Then Marriage and Babies”

<p>Arnela, 18, bottle-feeds her 18-month old daughter in her pram while Sabrina, 17 (left), cradles her 28-day old son on her lap. <i>Photo &copy; Jason D. Jones / UNFPA</i> </p>
  • 30 October 2013

VISOKO, Bosnia and Herzegovina — Like many other Roma women in South-Eastern Europe, Arnela and Sabrina gave birth before they turned 18. The two young mothers from Visoko in Bosnia and Herzegovina are sisters-in-law, and they share the experience of having seen their dreams shattered by getting pregnant too early in life.

“I wanted to finish school and become a hairdresser. But my wishes never came true,” says Arnela.

Sabrina, too, had hoped to complete her education and find a job, a place to live, perhaps her own apartment. “But all the dreams I had fell apart,” she says.

Although illegal under national laws across Europe, it is customary for Roma populations to marry their children at an early age. “Almost half of them marry before the age of 18 and many of them marry before age 15,” says Doina Bologa, the UNFPA Country Director for Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The State of World Population 2013 examines the challenges of adolescent pregnancy.

Facing social and economic exclusion from mainstream society, and pressures from within their own communities, Roma girls often have no choice but to follow traditions, get married as teenagers and leave school. Even if this means the end of their dreams – and often, a life lived in poverty.

More often than not, early marriage is followed by early pregnancy and childbirth. In neighbouring Serbia for example, the adolescent birth rate among the Roma minority is 158 per 1000 women, more than six times the national average of 24. In Bulgaria, more than 50 per cent of Roma girls give birth before they turn 18 years old. In Albania, the average age of Roma mothers at the birth of their first child is 17.

According to Ms. Bologa, early pregnancy does not only limit adolescent girls’ opportunities; it also carries significant health risks for both the young mothers and their babies.

But Melina Halilovic believes there is a way to break the cycle of poverty and early pregnancy. Of Roma origin herself, and despite having lost both of her parents at an early age, Ms. Halilovic, now 26, managed to complete her education. She went on to establish the Roma Youth Initiative ‘Be My Friend’ in Visoko and now helps teenagers like Arnela and Sabrina.

“Success for me is when children from our workshop say to us: 'We are going to school now,'” says Melina. “For so many years we have been talking with parents, telling them they should send their children to the school, even [if] they don't have money. And I'm happy when they come to us and say they are going to school now. I think this is the major success for us. For all of us.”

A recent survey shows why education is so crucial: Roma girls with secondary education are dramatically less likely to have their first child as an adolescent (only 5.6 per cent, compared to a pregnancy rate of almost 27 per cent among all Roma women aged 15 to 19).

Sabrina, speaking from her own experience, agrees: “My advice to another young girl would be to finish school, accomplish everything she wants and then to get married.”

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