Tag Archives: Syrian refugees

Out of control Syrian crisis threatening region

Storm clouds gather over a Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon. Credit:  Andreas Zinggl/Caritas Austria

Storm clouds gather over a Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon. Credit: Andreas Zinggl/Caritas Austria

The humanitarian situation in Lebanon is desperate as over a million Syrian refugees seek safety in their tiny neighbour. “What we have been seeing is unbelievable, says President of Caritas Lebanon, Fr. Simon Faddoul. “The numbers are growing in an incredible way. The situation is getting worse. It’s becoming disastrous.”

Caritas Lebanon reports that there is a shortage of shelter to house the refugees, that diseases are spreading due to the unhygienic situation of the makeshift camps and that Lebanon’s delicate political balance is at risk.

Fr. Simon says, “To all those good hearted people, please listen to the suffering of the Syrian people inside Syria and in the neighbouring countries. Lebanon has four million inhabitants – we are hosting 1.2 million Syrian people. That means more than 25 percent of the population has become Syrian. From the humanitarian side, it is becoming uncontrollable.” Continue reading

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Tragic death of Syrian baby in Lebanon

Caritas Lebanon provides healthcare to Syrian refugees through mobile clinics. Credit: Evert-Jan Daniels/CORDAID

Caritas Lebanon provides healthcare to Syrian refugees through mobile clinics. Credit: Evert-Jan Daniels/CORDAID

By Caritas Lebanon Migrants Centre

The parents of 8-month old Amjad Aalawayn came to the Caritas Lebanon Migrant Centre in Zahle in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon on Wednesday 3 April looking for help for their sick baby. The family were Syrian refugees, fleeing the fighting in their country. The baby was pale, listless and had no appetite.

They came to Caritas after one hospital had refused to admit Amjad because of money issues. A Caritas social worker contacted a paediatrician to transfer him to a hospital, but sadly he passed away while waiting for medical assistance.

Our social worker contacted the hospital where he was transferred, whereby they confirmed the death of 8-month old Amjad. No cause of death was declared as was dead on arrival. May this angel’s soul rest in peace, a peace he certainly didn’t find in here.

Many sick children have been referred to Caritas from the same camp with similar symptoms.  Syrian refugees don’t get enough medical assistance.

Najla Chahda, Director of Caritas Lebanon Migrant Centre, said, “There is an urgent need to provide medical assistance for these children quickly. We hope that a solution would be found soon to all Syrian refugees and put an end to their suffering.

UPDATE

Today, the Caritas team went on-site to check the situation in the settlement where Amjad’s family is living. It seems that one child was diagnosed with tuberculosis and discharged from hospital where he stayed for two days, due to lack of money. There are lots of children and adults showing mild similar symptoms, but at least six children and two to three adults are sick.

We immediately notified the IMC team who promised to go on field immediately. We fear an outbreak of this highly contagious disease, especially when considering the deplorable sanitary conditions experienced by the refugees living in this location.

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Lebanon buckling under influx of refugees

This Syrian family was taken in by relatives in the Lebanese town of Baalbek. Photo: Jos de Voogd/Cordaid

This Syrian family was taken in by relatives in the Lebanese town of Baalbek. Photo: Jos de Voogd/Cordaid

By Jos de Vogd, CORDAID (Caritas Netherlands)

After two years of fighting in Syria, the flow of refugees into neighbouring Lebanon is increasing the pressure on this small country by the day. According to recent government figures, more than a million Syrians are now in Lebanon. And every week more than 10,000 more displaced people, all looking for accommodation, are adding to the problem because there are no official refugee camps there.

The numbers include refugees registered or waiting to be registered with the UN refuge agency UNHCR. But they also include people who are either not willing to register as well as seasonal workers who didn’t return to Syria because of the civil war, instead persuading their families to join them in Lebanon. Also included are Palestinian refugees from Syria and Lebanon who were permanently living in Syria. At the moment, one in five people in Lebanon come from Syria.

There are refugees in over 900 locations across Lebanon. It’s making it difficult for the UN and aid agencies to reach those affected. So far, the Lebanese government is divided as to whether it should allow official refugee camps, one of the reasons being that Lebanon has struggled with a large number of Palestinian refugees for many years.

The need for affordable accommodation is very pressing. In the north of the country and throughout the Bekaa valley on the Syrian border, refugees are living in makeshift tents, barns, rooms and apartments, or with Lebanese families who have taken them in. And quite often they have to pay for this hospitality because after two years the local people have had enough. Rents and the prices of building materials have risen sharply.

The Syrian family of 81-year-old Mrs. Souad count themselves lucky. The family, totaling 11 people, including Mrs. Souad’s two daughters, their children and three great grandchildren, found accommodation in the small city of Baalbek. They are staying free-of-charge with a third daughter and her Lebanese husband. The Souads are a relatively affluent family as many of them worked as teachers in Syria.

However, their homes in the Syrian city of Homs were destroyed and because they have not been able to find work in Lebanon they are dependent on the income of their host family and on food vouchers handed out by aid organisations. Every person, irrespective of age, receives a monthly food voucher worth US$30.

The Souad family has been in Lebanon for a year now. “Initially the Lebanese were very welcoming but that welcome has now evaporated. Every day we are told that we are stealing their jobs,” said Raphde, one of the daughters.

In the meantime, the continuing unrest means tourism in Lebanon has all but collapsed. Hotels in the north of the country, as well as those in its skiing resorts, are empty.

At the current rate of refugee influx there will be two million refugees in Lebanon by the end of the year.

And if the “battle for Damascus” flares up, one million refugees could materialize in just 48 hours. Pro- and anti-Assad factions have been fighting for several months in the Lebanese coastal city of Tripoli, and there are fears that the fighting will spill over to other areas. Meanwhile, aid organisations are struggling to get financing for their aid programs and the appeal of the UN has been subscribed by just 30 percent.

Whichever scenario follows, the pressure on the fragile Lebanese society is increasing and, as a result, there is a real fear of local escalation.

This article first appeared on the CORDAID blog.

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Syrian crisis through the eyes of its refugees

A Syrian refugee at an informal education class run by Caritas Jordan in Zarqa.

A Syrian refugee at an informal education class run by Caritas Jordan in Zarqa. All photos Patrick Nicholson/Caritas

By Patrick Nicholson

“Each Syrian you meet will tell you a different story; but they are all the same tragedy,” said Fawaz, a refugee who crossed into Jordan last month.

Since the conflict began two years ago in Syria, its cities have been devastated, its people go hungry, living in fear, 70,000 are dead and around 3 million have been forced from their homes.

Half of the Syrian refugees who have fled their country are in Jordan. Most live in urban areas in rented rooms. Caritas Jordan provides them with humanitarian aid, housing support, healthcare, education and counseling.

Here are five of their stories.

Fawaz

Fawaz and his daughter Maram wait at the caritas medical clinic in Amman.

Fawaz and his daughter Maram wait at the caritas medical clinic in Amman.

Fawaz cradles his 20-day old baby girl in his arms as they wait at the Caritas clinic in Amman. The baby has a high fever and has been born with a hip problem. Thankfully her twin brother is healthy and happy.  The twins were born just days after Fawaz and his wife made the dangerous crossing into Jordan from Syria in January.

They had been running from hideout to hideout inside Syria for 6 months after they witnessed the massacre of 40 relatives in Hama. All the members of his aunt’s family were killed. “They were caught in a crossfire,” he said.  His village is a ghost town, its 7000 residents all gone. “In Syria, there is only death now,” said Fawaz.

“As we were expecting twins, a doctor advised us that we would probably need an incubator,” he said. “The hospitals are not functioning. It’s too dangerous to try to reach them. So when I found my name was not on the wanted list, we came to Jordan.”

Fawaz, his wife, the twins, his mother and sister live in a tent he has built from four wood sticks and bits of cloth on wasteland. “It’s like 150 years ago,” he said. They have no heater, only wood to burn. “It is very cold,” he said. “And the smoke from the fire makes the babies ill.”

As well as receiving medical care through the clinic, his family have also been registered by Caritas staff members to receive humanitarian aid like a heater and vouchers to buy food, blankets, warm clothing and fuel.  “I don’t know what will happen to us next,” said Fawaz. “We thought the crisis would be over in a month. It’s now been two years.”

Zarfeh

Zarfeh's son puts together a heater supplied by Caritas.

Zarfeh’s son puts together a heater supplied by Caritas.

Zarfeh Shibleyh has just received a new heater from Caritas and vouchers which she has bought blankets with. She lives in the Jordanian town of Mafraq with eight of her children. Two of the older boys and her husband remain in Syria, their whereabouts unknown.  Their photos are at the centre of a heart collage on one of the walls.

“We had to get the children out because it had become too dangerous,” she said. They left Aleppo in December 2012 with only the clothes on their backs. “I brought nothing of value, except my children. There is nothing more precious than that.” Her parents fled to Lebanon.

She registered with Caritas to receive aid, but life is still tough. To earn enough money to pay rent, the teenage children must work. They leave home at 5am for a long day’s labour,  of which they receive 2 Jordanian dinars, around three dollars.  Rent is 150 dinars a month.

“They are losing their education,” she said. “But what can we do. We have to pay rent.”

Rosan

Rosan Kurdi at home.

Rosan Kurdi at home.

“I cannot describe my daily life. It is empty” said Rosan Kurdi, a Syrian refugee in Amman. “I have nothing. I have no food to cook with. I have no friends. My husband is trapped in Syria. Apart from my child, I’m completely alone.”

She lives with her small boy in a tiny, dilapidated room in a Palestinian refugee camp in the city. Jordan is home to many waves of refugees, especially Palestinians and Iraqis. She doesn’t know anyone in the neighbourhood. Sometimes a relative comes to babysit, so she can go out to look for work.

Without a husband or family to provide income or childcare, Rosan must rely on Caritas. “I received many things. Vouchers for the clothes and shoes you see my child wearing. Medicine for him. And food and blankets. Without Caritas, I’m isolated,” she said.

She has lost almost all of her hope. “Only the welfare of my child gives me the strength to carry on,” she said. “He has had a very tough life, a life with no dignity. My only dream is that the boy will return one day to Syria. Nobody should have to grow up outside their own country.”

Halabia

Halabia Althaner recieving treatment at the Italian Hospital in Amman.

Halabia Althaner recieving treatment at the Italian Hospital in Amman.

“Our house was destroyed by bombs,” said Halabia Althaner. “One of our children died in the attack. Two more are missing after they went outside.  My husband had a series of strokes as a result.

“We searched everywhere for the children. But our neighbours told us that we must give up. If they were alive, they would have turned up.”

Halabia is suffering from severe headaches. She is waiting for treatment in the Italian Hospital in Amman. Caritas refers cases there from its clinics across the country.

She lives with her husband and seven of her remaining children. “It is very difficult. We can’t afford for them to study. We don’t have the money. But at least we live in peace and security.”

Mohammad

Mohammad Azroun picking up blankets and other aid at a Caritas centre in Madaba.

Mohammad Azroun picking up blankets and other aid at a Caritas centre in Madaba.

“It’s agony to see my beloved Homs destroyed,” said Mohammad Azroun, who fled the Syrian city last Spring and is now in Madaba, Jordan.  “At first we thought we could handle it, but then the bombs and destruction increased. We fled to Damascus, but the pattern started to repeat itself, so we left Syria.”

He arrived in Jordan five months ago with his family. “ When you first arrive, you are in complete shock. You are mentally and physically tired from the journey. You are in a weird environment where everyone is a stranger.”

Mohammad received help just four days after coming to Madaba. Caritas provided hygiene kits with things like soap, tooth brushes and nail clippers inside, as well as blankets, heaters, and  vouchers for food and fuel.  “Also we support each other,” said Mohammed. “We are four families living in the same house, and we look after each other.”

Rent for lodgings is one of the biggest challenges, and for that Mohammad must look for work. He is optimistic and tells his young children things will get better. “I tell them that our lives will return to how they were and one day we will be able to go home.” he said. “Syria doesn’t deserve this. Please save Syria. Tell everyone in the world to help Syria.”

 

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Je veux la liberté dans ma vie

Hoda, 35 ans, enseignait l’anglais à Homs. Copyright: Secours Catholique/Patrick Delapierre

Hoda, 35 ans, enseignait l’anglais à Homs. Copyright: Secours Catholique/Patrick Delapierre

Par Marina Bellot, Secours Catholique

Dans la plaine agricole de la Bekaa, à l’est du pays, des centaines de tentes ont fait leur apparition. Là vivent les Syriens qui ont fui leur pays, souvent sans rien emporter. Parmi eux, Hoda, 35 ans, qui a retrouvé les membres de sa famille dans le camp Majd el Anjar.

Depuis un mois, Hoda n’a plus l’occasion de pratiquer l’anglais. Cette femme professeur de 35 ans qui enseignait dans un lycée privé de Homs a dû fuir les bombes qui s’abattent sur la ville. Avec son mari et ses cinq enfants, Hoda a rejoint la centaine de membres de sa famille qui ont posé leurs tentes sur ce bout de terrain perdu au milieu des cultures de la plaine de la Bekaa. Elle qui s’est faite la porte-parole de la famille tient à témoigner de la difficulté du quotidien… En anglais.

« En Syrie, on ne savait pas qui étaient nos ennemis. A Homs, les rues étaient remplies de cadavres, certains décapités, qui restaient là plusieurs jours de suite. J’ai appris qu’une de mes élèves avait été violée pendant 6 jours puis assassinée. Le jour où j’ai vu une femme tuée devant mes yeux, je suis partie. Nous avons beaucoup souffert. Tout le monde a besoin d’une aide psychologique ici, surtout les enfants. Quand ils entendent les tirs des chasseurs libanais, ils sont terrorisés.

Ici, nous sommes en sécurité, mais nous avons tout laissé derrière nous. Nous vivons dans des conditions très difficiles. Les journées se ressemblent : le matin je me lève tôt, les enfants vont à l’école et moi je vais dans la tente de mon frère, plus confortable que la mienne, pour me réchauffer et cuisiner. Mon mari, lui, essaie de trouver du travail selon le temps qu’il fait. S’il pleut, il ne trouve rien, sinon, il a une chance. La plupart du temps, il récolte des pommes de terre pour 10 dollars par jour. A Homs, il était électricien et gagnait bien sa vie.

Jusqu’à trente personnes dorment sous la même tente. Dans la mienne, nous sommes sept. C’est humide et nous n’avons pas de chauffage. Avant, j’avais un appartement avec trois chambres, une vraie cuisine, une machine à laver… Ma vie était facile. Ici il n’y a pas de toilettes, et nous avons à peine de quoi manger. Tous les trois jours, nous allons chercher un gallon d’eau (3,7 litres, Ndlr) à la ferme à côté. Le propriétaire est un Libanais, mais l’exploitant est un Syrien qui accepte de nous aider en ne nous faisant pas payer. Avec un gallon, on doit tout faire : boire, se laver, laver les légumes, les vêtements… Ce Syrien nous donne aussi des légumes que nous cuisinons.

Ici, dans le camp, nous sommes tous révolutionnaires. Nous ne voulons plus d’un système dictatorial. Je suis une femme libre, je veux la liberté dans ma vie. Si la guerre s’arrête, nous retournerons à Homs sans hésitation, pour dormir dans nos lits. J’espère revoir un jour un Homs libre. »

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Nouveaux arrivants à Bourj el-Barajneh, le camp palestinien le plus peuplé du Liban

Près de 20 000 réfugiés occupent le camp palestinien de Bourj el-Barajneh, au sud de Beyrouth. Copyright: Secours Catholique/Patrick Delapierre

Près de 20 000 réfugiés occupent le camp palestinien de Bourj el-Barajneh, au sud de Beyrouth. Copyright: Secours Catholique/Patrick Delapierre

Par Marina Bellot, Secours Catholique

Près de 500 000 Palestiniens vivent dans des camps au Liban. Depuis le début du conflit, les Palestiniens qui fuient la Syrie viennent grossir la population du camp de Bourj el-Barajneh, le plus peuplé du pays.

Il faut se faufiler dans un dédale de ruelles, certaines totalement plongées dans le noir, pour parvenir jusqu’au petit local qu’occupe l’association Who, soutenue par Caritas, qui aide les femmes les plus défavorisées du camp de Bourj el-Barajneh, au sud de Beyrouth. L’une des responsables de l’association nous guide dans ce monde sombre, humide et oppressant, à quelques encablures du centre huppé de la capitale.

C’est en 1948, lors de la création de l’Etat d’Israël, que les premiers Palestiniens en exil ont posé le pied dans ce quartier de la banlieue de Beyrouth. Année après année, la population a explosé avec l’arrivée successive des Libanais les plus pauvres, puis de Syriens, d’Egyptiens, d’Irakiens… Depuis le début du conflit en Syrie, de nouveaux arrivants viennent densifier encore le camp, qui abrite près de 20 000 personnes dans un périmètre d’à peine un kilomètre carré. Ici, l’eau n’est pas potable, et l’électricité ne fonctionne que quelques heures par jour. L’enchevêtrement spectaculaire de fils électriques nus menacent en permanence la vie des habitants. Il y a quelques mois, l’inévitable est arrivé : un enfant, un de plus, est mort électrocuté.
Le désarroi au quotidien

L’anarchie qui a présidé à la construction du camp fait aussi craindre le pire, tant les maisons délabrées sont empilées les unes sur les autres. Les habitants y sont privés de la lumière du jour. «  Regardez dans quoi on vit », s’indigne Rasmyeh, 64 ans, en montrant la petite fenêtre sans carreaux et les murs pelés par l’humidité. Depuis 5 mois elle habite ici avec ses trois filles, son fils et leurs enfants. Douze personnes au total, qui se partagent deux pièces sombres et froides. Avant d’emménager ici, ils vivaient dans le camp palestinien de Yarmouk, près de Damas, devenu le théâtre de violents combats entre opposants et partisans du régime. Bien sûr, ce n’était pas le luxe. Mais c’était chez eux, insiste Rasmyeh. Au Liban, dit-elle, tout est cher. Inaccessible. Quelques voisins l’ont bien aidée en la dépannant d’un tapis et de quelques chaises en plastique. Mais manger à sa faim tous les jours est une autre affaire. Depuis son arrivée ici, elle dit n’avoir reçu qu’un colis alimentaire du Hamas, et deux autres d’ONG. «  Les associations donnent aux Syriens, mais pas aux Palestiniens de Syrie, se désole Rasmyeh. Quand les enfants ont faim et que je ne peux pas leur donner à manger, ça me fait trop mal ». Ce désarroi, la population du camp, marquée par les conflits, minée par la pauvreté, découragée par l’absence de perspectives, le subit au quotidien. Fin 2008, Médecins sans Frontières a mis en place un programme d’aide mentale dans le camp, dont ont bénéficié plus de 1 000 habitants. Dépression, anxiété, psychoses, désordres bipolaires, troubles de la personnalité – autant de maladies fréquemment diagnostiquées par MSF.

Najham, comme tant d’autres ici, se sent « stressée ». La jeune fille de 20 ans, dont les cernes bleutées soulignent l’épuisement, est arrivée ici il y a trois mois, quand les combats se sont dangereusement approchés de sa maison en Syrie. Avec sa mère et sa sœur enceinte, elle a rejoint sa grand-mère Amira, qui habite le camp depuis 1948. « Je ne pourrai pas m’intégrer ici, tout est trop différent, estime Najham. En Syrie, j’allais au restaurant, dans les magasins. Ici je ne connais personne et on n’a pas d’argent pour sortir ». Alors, pour se donner du courage, elle pense à la Syrie. La vie qu’elle y a laissée. La vie qu’elle espère retrouver au plus vite.

Marina Bellot

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Caritas Turkey: side by side with Syrian refugees

SONY DSC

A Caritas Turkey social worker updates the prescription of a Syrian refugee so they have access to medicines.
Credit: Caritas Turkey

By Caritas Turkey

There are tens of thousands Syrian refugee families living outside the tent camps along the Syria-Turkey border. This is a number increasing very fast day by day. About an hour far from Istanbul, some Syrian refugee families live in poor and crowded housing conditions.

Ali, a 13 year old young boy, is worried for his father, who developed serious hypertension and heart problems recently, following the stress he has to endure every day. He, together with his family and children, had to flee in a rush from a conflict in Syria, facing a dangerous, long journey to cross the border into Turkey.

Now, they do not know for how long they will have to stay in Turkey without sufficient resources, jobs, education, health services, and without being allowed to apply for asylum or being given an official status. They are worried about the rent, the future of their children, the food and even more they are worried about what is happening to the people they left behind. They are worried about not being able to see their houses, their country again.

Ali and his family share the house with three other families. In total they are 14 people. Ali repeats the words of the social worker of Caritas, “Please daddy pay attention not to forget to take your pills every day.”

The Caritas Turkey team visits districts in Istanbul where Syrian refugees are staying to provide medical support, food coupons and blankets. Social workers follow the needs of individuals who have specific vulnerabilities with attention, contacting hospitals providing translators, writing to official state institutions for them. House visits are organised not only to deliver the relief items but also to be close to people to listen to them while having tea together.

An Iraqi refugee himself, translator of the team, Aassim, says, “Caritas visits to the houses are very important to be side by side with them. In these difficult days, as humans we need to act in solidarity, we need to care for the problems of the refugees.”

Caritas Turkey recently also provided hygiene items, pyjamas and medical supplies for Syrian refugees in Kilis, Gaziantep. An appeal was made by Caritas Turkey recently to support refugees in Kilis and Reyhanlı where Syrian refugees are living.

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Syria Crisis: More than just a quilt

Fatima picks a quilt. Credit: Caritas Jordan

By Dana Shahin, Caritas Jordan

Fatima is a widow who recently fled the conflict in Syria to seek refuge in Jordan. She came to the Caritas Jordan centre in Mafraq where she would be able to receive essential help.

Once she’d registered with a Caritas staff member, she headed over to the volunteer’s desk to receive her aid items such as blankets, quilts and personal hygiene products.

There were large boxes consisting of different coloured quilts. The volunteers usually picks one or two, depending on the family size, and hand them over to the refugees.

Fatima, after taking her package, approached one of the volunteers. With a shy quiet voice, she asked, “Is it ok if I choose another quilt? I don’t like this colour.”

The Caritas team told her to pick another one. With a thrilled expression on her face , she ran happily to the box and took few minutes to pick the one she liked.

“This is my favourite colour, is it ok to have this one instead?” Fatima held proudly a blue quilt. “Of course,” said the volunteer. “This is actually yours and you have the right to get the one that you like most”.

A Caritas Jordan staff member said that they ensure all the refugees are treated with dignity. They’re not simply ‘beneficiaries’ but human people.

“There is a strong belief within Caritas Jordan volunteers and employees that aid distribution is part of an act of love done for and with all the people in need. They make up the patchwork quilt that is Caritas,” said one Caritas Jordan emergency staff member.

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Life after Syria

“I thank Caritas every day for the assistance we received”

Three months ago, Sanaa gave birth alone in her house, just a few days after arriving in Lebanon from Syria. She, her husband and their two young children ran away from heavy shelling .They are from Hama and did not know anyone in Lebanon.

“We had no money to eat and we got scared for the children,” she said. “We know the situation will not get better soon in Syria”.

A few years ago, her husband had an accident. Since then, he cannot move his right hand and has severe memory loss. Sometimes, he does not recognise his own wife. Despite this disability, he found a job as a gardener. But the salary is low and they cannot even afford nappies for their new born.

The family was referred to Caritas Lebanon by a former municipality member in the Bekaa. They had never heard of Caritas before coming to the office. “I wanted milk and nappies for my baby, medical assistance for my husband and food” she admitted. Although Caritas could not meet all her expectations – the family received a food kit, bed sheets, blankets, towels and one hygiene kit and were told about the mobile clinic.

Sanaa remains deeply grateful. “I thank Caritas every day for the assistance we received” she said with a smile.

Bitten by rats

Mohammed lives with 25 members of his family in Lebanon’s Bekka valley. They all fled the shelling and fighting between the rebels and the army in Hama a few months ago.

“The situation became too dangerous because deserters from Homs hide in Hama. So we decided to leave,” Mohammed tells the Caritas social worker conducting the home visit.

For LL 400,000 (US $260) per month they live in two dilapidated houses in unsanitary conditions. One month ago, 2 children (7 months old and 2 years old) and their mother were bitten by rats at night. Even though they did not have any money to see a doctor, the closest hospital treated them for free.

Notwithstanding their poor living conditions in Lebanon, they do not want to go back to Syria before the situation improves. “I don’t want to go to back to the border even when our visas expire,” he says.

Mohammed’s family will be able to stay in Lebanon until the situation calms down in Syria, the government is committed to not arresting Syrians for illegal overstay. But in order to carry on until they can return, they sought Caritas’ assistance and received food kits, blankets, bed sheets and pillowcase.

Child health

Last June, Raghida decided to leave Syria with her 7 children as life became impossible there. “We hoped that the battle would stop, so we waited . But it got worse,” she said.

When everyone started leaving she followed. She is now living with her children in a tent along with another Syrian family, in precarious conditions. They survived thanks to the help and generosity of some Lebanese people and donations.

Later she found out about Caritas through a neighbour, so she went to the centre in the Bekka valley in the hope of getting medicine for her children.“ I cannot stand not being able to give medicine to my children,” she told a Caritas social worker .

Since she has been directed to the Caritas mobile Clinic and is now provided with nursing care and medicine for her family. She also received a food kit, hygiene kit and bed sheets .

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Escaping bullets and bombs in Syria

As Syria refugees pour into Jordan, Turkey, and Lebanon, Caritas is giving them food, medical care, and emergency aid. Ilham, a mother of five, described a harrowing day in her home city to Caritas Communications Officer Laura Sheahen.

Ilham was shot in the leg after a sniper killed her neighbour as he returned bringing milk for her children. She later fled Syria with her children. Photo: Laura Sheahen/Caritas

I have nothing to do with the military, I am a civilian. We’re from Bab Amr, in Homs.

One day I wanted to go get milk. My neighbour Adnan said, “Don’t go, I’ll bring you milk. I’m afraid you’ll be killed.” The snipers shoot from a long distance. We don’t see the shooter, but he sees us.

It was about 2 pm and Adnan was bringing the milk to me, two containers. A shooter was up in a building in a small window.

He was shot. The bullet went through his arm to his heart.

I went out to try to save Adnan. The person who shot him also shot me, to prevent me from reaching him. The bullet went through my left thigh. I was lucky it didn’t hit the bone.

Some people came to help. I said, “Go to him first, he’s bleeding so much.” But the medical services are bad, no one could save him.

I hopped to other neighbours and they tied a bandage around my leg.

I kept hoping things would improve. But my house was bombarded three times. I slept in my clothes and headscarf because I was afraid we’d have to run out at night, or someone would come in.

We left for Damascus, but then bombardments began there. I thought, “It’s becoming too bad.” I was afraid my children would be killed. I realized we had to leave.

Now we live here in Jordan.

Ilham speaks with Caritas Jordan staff in the doctor’s office of a Caritas center. Photo: Laura Sheahen/Caritas

I have epilepsy, and so do three of my children. My daughter has seizures twice a day. She foams at the mouth and her whole body becomes stiff.

Here in Jordan, my neighbours told me about Caritas. I am going to talk to the Caritas doctor about epilepsy medicine. If this doctor wasn’t here, I don’t know what I’d do.

I didn’t want to leave my country, but I was afraid for my kids.

Adnan had five children. We were neighbours, and like family. May he rest in peace.

Caritas is helping thousands of refugees like Ilham. Read more about the crisis and consider donating.

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