Samir Duwoot says she cries every day because her children don’t have a father. It’s the reality of the five-year conflict in Syria. People, families left with nothing. Her daughter knows no different. Like many children here, her young eyes have seen much of the brutality of conflict, but have never seen home.
Her dad,
Shahadi Nanood, died last year while fighting for the regime. She
doesn’t understand where he’s gone, with her mother saying she sleeps in the
same place her father used to sleep, she’s waiting for him to come home. The rest of
their family have fled to Lebanon. For those in poverty like
them, there’s no option but to stay.
They now
live in this school near Damascus, which 141 people now call home. A building
serving a dual purpose. But it’s estimated that
across Syria, up to two million children no longer go to school, a further
million no longer live in their own homes and six million need emergency humanitarian assistance.
“It’s been
the most dangerous place in the world for children. Five years is a lifetime for a
child! This war has been going on for five years! There are ten year olds in
Syria who’ve never seen the inside of a classroom.”
Generations, opportunities changed forever by
this conflict and in the balance if the ceasefire doesn’t hold.
Fuente: News in levels & Interantional Rescue Committee
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