World’s Oldest Primary school student, Priscilla Sitienei<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nMs Sitienei’s story inspired a film and praise from the UN’s culture and education agency, Unesco.<\/p>\n
She grew up in a Kenya occupied by the British and lived through her country’s struggle for independence.<\/p>\n
She told Unesco last year that she wanted to motivate young mothers to return to school.<\/p>\n
“I wanted to show an example not only to them but to other girls around the world who are not in school, without education, there will be no difference between you and a chicken,” she said.<\/p>\n
She joined Leaders Vision Preparatory School in 2010, but also served her village of Ndalat in the Rift Valley as a midwife for more than 65 years.<\/p>\n
She had even helped deliver some of her own classmates, who were then aged between 10 and 14.<\/p>\n
Affectionately known as “Gogo”, which means grandmother in the local Kalenjin language, she told the BBC<\/a> in 2015 that she was finally learning to read and write – an opportunity she never had as a child.<\/p>\nShe often confronted children who were not in school and asked them why.<\/p>\n
“They tell me they are too old,” she said. “I tell them: ‘Well I am at school and so should you.'”<\/p>\n
“I see children who are lost, children who are without fathers, just going round and round, hopeless. I want to inspire them to go to school,” she added.<\/p>\n
‘Her message lives on’<\/p>\n
At first the school turned her away but soon understood how committed she was to learning.<\/p>\n