Surrounded by pristine waters, the Félix Estéban Oller High School is located on Nargana Island, also known as Yandup, which belongs to the Guna Yala Comarca. This school accommodates more than 300 students from the seventh to the twelfth grade. Among them is Nailineth Solano, a 16-year-old girl of the Guna indigenous ethnic group, who is in the ninth grade.
Like any teenager, Nailineth enjoys spending time with her friends at school. However, her interaction is limited by sunlight because she was born with albinism, a genetic condition characterized by the absence of pigmentation (melanin) in the skin, hair, and eyes, which forces her to avoid exposure to the sun.
Her mother, Natividad Solano, says she wishes Nailineth could develop like any other teenager, playing and enjoying physical education classes with her classmates. However, year after year, she has to ask the physical education teachers to give her theoretical assignments, in order for her to avoid being exposed to the sun, since the gymnasium has no roof and the children must take classes under the radiant daytime sunshine. For Nailineth, this precaution is necessary, as the sunlight affects her eyes and makes her more vulnerable to diseases, such as skin cancer.
For Natividad, her daughter “feels limited, as she would like to play volleyball like other children, but she cannot expose herself to the sun. She can only sit and watch her friends play and have fun, while she misses out on the opportunity to develop her sports skills”.