<p>With its walls pounded by artillery, roofs torn open and concrete beams in shreds, Al-Wehdah school lies in ruins as students return for the first day of Yemen's school year.</p>.<p>At the school near Taez, the third-biggest city in a country shattered by years of war between the government and Iran-backed Huthi rebels, there are no doors or windows, let alone desks.</p>.<p>Instead the students use old exercise books to jot down their lessons, as they sit in makeshift classrooms with a handful of teachers brave enough to join them under crumbling ceilings.</p>.<p>Yet in a country where nearly a third of children don't go to school at all, these are the lucky ones.<br /><br /><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/yemens-heritage-battered-first-by-bombs-then-floods-872785.html" target="_blank">Yemen's heritage battered first by bombs, then floods</a></strong></p>.<p>Al-Wehdah school was hit in a 2016 air strike.</p>.<p>Ali Sultan, a parent of one of the students, points out to AFP a warning sign in red letters written on a perimeter wall.</p>.<p>"Beware of Mines," it reads.</p>.<p>The school is located in the middle of a minefield, that was partially cleared to allow the students to return.</p>.<p>"We were faced with a difficult choice, either leave them at home or face the risk of bringing them here to study in this rubble," Sultan said.</p>.<p>Children first returned to the school the year after the strike.</p>.<p>"We have been through very difficult times," Sultan said, referring to the fighting in the southwest city, which is held by government forces but besieged by Huthi fighters.</p>.<p>In Taez city alone, 47 schools were "totally destroyed in the fighting," said Abdel Wassae Chaddad, provincial director of education.</p>.<p>"As far as destruction is concerned, we got the lion's share," he said.</p>.<p>Chaddad said he was forced to close those schools and tell students to go to any other that could accommodate them -- even if they were also in poor shape.</p>.<p>Some children have to walk long distances to get there.</p>.<p>In Jamila al-Wafi's classroom, instead of a blackboard, she writes out the day's lessons in pencil on a supporting beam.</p>.<p>The students, seated on the floor, follow her attentively. They make notes carefully in their exercise books.</p>.<p>Once the lesson is over, they slide down a collapsed roof that serves as a staircase from the classroom down to the ground floor.</p>.<p>"We have 500 students," said Wafi, dressed in black and with her face covered, pointing to the neatly presented boys and girls, who study in separate classrooms. </p>.<p>"We call on the whole world and the business community to save the school," she said. "It could collapse at any moment."</p>.<p>In the courtyard, the children do some light exercises to start the day, and then queue up quietly waiting for classes to begin.</p>.<p>Two million of Yemen's seven million school-age children do not get to go to school at all, according to the United Nations.</p>.<p>More than 2,500 schools have been put out of commission.</p>.<p>Two-thirds have been damaged in attacks, while others are used by the army, as shelters for people forced from their home by the fighting, or simply closed in a country with few resources.</p>.<p>The conflict pits the Huthi rebels, who control the capital Sanaa and much of the country's north, against a government which is militarily backed by a Saudi Arabia-led coalition.</p>.<p>The war has killed tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, and resulted in what the UN has described as the world's worst humanitarian crisis.</p>.<p>Some 3.3 million people have been displaced from their homes and 24 million, or more than 80 percent of the population, are in need of aid, according to the UN. </p>.<p>For the teachers and students of Al-Wehdah School, the alternatives are very limited, Wafi said.</p>.<p>"We will continue the work, despite the great danger, if we can prevent a lost generation of students who lack education," she said.</p>
<p>With its walls pounded by artillery, roofs torn open and concrete beams in shreds, Al-Wehdah school lies in ruins as students return for the first day of Yemen's school year.</p>.<p>At the school near Taez, the third-biggest city in a country shattered by years of war between the government and Iran-backed Huthi rebels, there are no doors or windows, let alone desks.</p>.<p>Instead the students use old exercise books to jot down their lessons, as they sit in makeshift classrooms with a handful of teachers brave enough to join them under crumbling ceilings.</p>.<p>Yet in a country where nearly a third of children don't go to school at all, these are the lucky ones.<br /><br /><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/yemens-heritage-battered-first-by-bombs-then-floods-872785.html" target="_blank">Yemen's heritage battered first by bombs, then floods</a></strong></p>.<p>Al-Wehdah school was hit in a 2016 air strike.</p>.<p>Ali Sultan, a parent of one of the students, points out to AFP a warning sign in red letters written on a perimeter wall.</p>.<p>"Beware of Mines," it reads.</p>.<p>The school is located in the middle of a minefield, that was partially cleared to allow the students to return.</p>.<p>"We were faced with a difficult choice, either leave them at home or face the risk of bringing them here to study in this rubble," Sultan said.</p>.<p>Children first returned to the school the year after the strike.</p>.<p>"We have been through very difficult times," Sultan said, referring to the fighting in the southwest city, which is held by government forces but besieged by Huthi fighters.</p>.<p>In Taez city alone, 47 schools were "totally destroyed in the fighting," said Abdel Wassae Chaddad, provincial director of education.</p>.<p>"As far as destruction is concerned, we got the lion's share," he said.</p>.<p>Chaddad said he was forced to close those schools and tell students to go to any other that could accommodate them -- even if they were also in poor shape.</p>.<p>Some children have to walk long distances to get there.</p>.<p>In Jamila al-Wafi's classroom, instead of a blackboard, she writes out the day's lessons in pencil on a supporting beam.</p>.<p>The students, seated on the floor, follow her attentively. They make notes carefully in their exercise books.</p>.<p>Once the lesson is over, they slide down a collapsed roof that serves as a staircase from the classroom down to the ground floor.</p>.<p>"We have 500 students," said Wafi, dressed in black and with her face covered, pointing to the neatly presented boys and girls, who study in separate classrooms. </p>.<p>"We call on the whole world and the business community to save the school," she said. "It could collapse at any moment."</p>.<p>In the courtyard, the children do some light exercises to start the day, and then queue up quietly waiting for classes to begin.</p>.<p>Two million of Yemen's seven million school-age children do not get to go to school at all, according to the United Nations.</p>.<p>More than 2,500 schools have been put out of commission.</p>.<p>Two-thirds have been damaged in attacks, while others are used by the army, as shelters for people forced from their home by the fighting, or simply closed in a country with few resources.</p>.<p>The conflict pits the Huthi rebels, who control the capital Sanaa and much of the country's north, against a government which is militarily backed by a Saudi Arabia-led coalition.</p>.<p>The war has killed tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, and resulted in what the UN has described as the world's worst humanitarian crisis.</p>.<p>Some 3.3 million people have been displaced from their homes and 24 million, or more than 80 percent of the population, are in need of aid, according to the UN. </p>.<p>For the teachers and students of Al-Wehdah School, the alternatives are very limited, Wafi said.</p>.<p>"We will continue the work, despite the great danger, if we can prevent a lost generation of students who lack education," she said.</p>