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Ethnic tensions in Macedonia are spilling over into the classroom. In a beautiful house near the market in Gostivar, Vjollca, an ethnic Albanian, spent the past week crying. For the whole of her last year at primary school she had fought with her parents to be allowed to go on to high school in this western Macedonian town. Her father, a man of conservative views, said she should stay at home and help her mother.
Neighbours intervened, and a teacher was persuaded to come and speak to her father. But he wouldn't relent - declaring last week that it was unsafe for her to travel to a mixed school. Being an ethnic Macedonia, the issue is not mixed-sex but mixed-community schooling. Vjollca's attitude is simple and voices the frustration of many students.
I don't care with whom. I want a better future, a career, I want to be able to make choices," she said. Pupils throughout Macedonia continue to be affected by the ongoing frictions between Macedonia's two main communities. Though armed clashes have stopped, political disputes are spilling over into the classrooms. The tensions have been such that the new school year began a week late. Ethnic Albanian parents in Tetovo and Gostivar, in the mainly ethnic Albanian western part of the republic, said they would refuse to allow their children to attend classes until heavy police road blocks were lifted.
Ethnic Macedonian parents countered by saying they would not permit their children to return to mixed schools as they feared for their safety. Similar scenes occurred in the northern town of Kumanovo. After the various local authorities reached fragile compromises, schools across the country re-opened on September When schoolchildren in Tetovo went back to class, it was clear that pupils from both communities in mountain villages, such as Jazhince and Vratnica, which had been affected by fighting, were absent.