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The teachers and imams fighting for vaccines

In Batken oblast, Kyrgyzstan, teachers and imams have reached nearly 80,000 people with talks on the importance of immunization

UNICEF
Teachers as first assistants to doctors
UNICEF/TynchtykNurbekov
18 March 2025
Reading time: 2 minutes

Nasiba Nachitova, a kindergarten teacher in Batken city, frequently speaks to parents about the importance of vaccination. However, she didn't always understand the crucial role that immunization plays in protecting children. “I used to hear that you needed to get vaccinated, but I had no idea that refusing vaccination could lead to terrible consequences and to horrible diseases,” she says.

Her outlook changed when she participated in seminars, organized by UNICEF and by the “Aizhan” public foundation, on immunization. Now Nasiba herself conducts such seminars for parents.

The parents go into the seminars knowing that vaccination is a social requirement. But by the end, they understand that it is a matter of children's safety.

“I always try to learn more about new vaccines so that my child is protected from all possible diseases,” says Shakir kyzy Aichurok, the mother to a kindergartner.

During the sessions, there is also time for parents to share their own stories. In one session, one mother, Gulburak Zhanybek, told the others how she suffered a severe case of measles in university because she was not vaccinated as a child. She still remembers the severe cough and suffocation that tormented her.

Gulburak’s experience as a child was the deciding factor for her to protect her child from vaccine-preventable diseases.

Training sessions organized in kindergartens in collaboration with doctors reached nearly 3,000 mums and dads who had questions and concerns about vaccination. Testing after the training showed a significant improvement in knowledge about the severity of preventable infections. 

Teachers as first assistants to doctors
UNICEF/TynchtykNurbekov

The imams talking about immunization

Sometimes, people refuse vaccines because they think, usually incorrectly, that their religion prohibits them. But religious leaders (imams) in Batken emphasize that immunization is crucial for maintaining health. After prayer, they began educating congregants about the importance of vaccinations.

“We must take care of our health,” Imam Nuriddin Kalnazarov told congregants after prayer at the mosque. “Vaccines help us protect ourselves from diseases. I get vaccinated myself and consider it good practice.”

While the imam already asked people to look after their health, it was through training organized by UNICEF that he learned about vaccines against hepatitis, tuberculosis, and other infections. As well as getting vaccinated himself, he actively supports other health initiatives to set an example for his mosque parishioners.

Nuriddin Kalnazarov
UNICEF/TynchtykNurbekov
Nuriddin Kalnazarov
UNICEF/TynchtykNurbekov

Many men from the community, following his example, also have received vaccinations.

“Heath of the whole family is important. The imam was vaccinated, and we follow his example," parishioner Isakov Abdrashit says. "We were vaccinated at school as children, so we are all healthy and have lived as long as we have.”

In 2024, thanks to the involvement of 60 religious leaders across Batken oblast, more than 76,000 mosque parishioners took part in discussions about the importance of vaccination – bringing the issue to the forefront of communities.