Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Syria's War Leaves Its Scars On The Children

  • Maysam Selmo, 8, during her first week at Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children in Antakya, Turkey. She and her extended family fled their village in northwestern Syria and now live in a crowded apartment.

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    Maysam Selmo, 8, during her first week at Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children in Antakya, Turkey. She and her extended family fled their village in northwestern Syria and now live in a crowded apartment.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Principal Sally Albunni enrolls new student Nureddin, 11, (right) who arrived in Antakya with his mother after his father was killed two weeks earlier in Syria.

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    Principal Sally Albunni enrolls new student Nureddin, 11, (right) who arrived in Antakya with his mother after his father was killed two weeks earlier in Syria.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Teacher Rafah Al Tinawie sets up a DVD player to show a video-story to her students. Al Tinawie teaches human resources at the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children. She tries to help them overcome the trauma most have experienced.

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    Teacher Rafah Al Tinawie sets up a DVD player to show a video-story to her students. Al Tinawie teaches human resources at the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children. She tries to help them overcome the trauma most have experienced.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Cousins Suleiman Selmo, 9, and Kawthar Selmo, 10, receive donated clothes on their second day at the school. Many Syrian children and families are in need of basic supplies including food and clothing.

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    Cousins Suleiman Selmo, 9, and Kawthar Selmo, 10, receive donated clothes on their second day at the school. Many Syrian children and families are in need of basic supplies including food and clothing.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • At the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee, teacher Emine Kusa leads a Turkish class for eighth-grade students. The school opened nearly two years ago when refugees began arriving in southern Turkey. A second building was recently opened to accommodate the growing number of students.

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    At the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee, teacher Emine Kusa leads a Turkish class for eighth-grade students. The school opened nearly two years ago when refugees began arriving in southern Turkey. A second building was recently opened to accommodate the growing number of students.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Children often show signs of trauma from their experiences inside Syria. A U.N. team interviewing Syrian kids in a refugee camp found that most lost a family member in the fighting, and almost half have post-traumatic stress disorder.

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    Children often show signs of trauma from their experiences inside Syria. A U.N. team interviewing Syrian kids in a refugee camp found that most lost a family member in the fighting, and almost half have post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Teachers at the school are mostly devout Muslims. Between classes, teachers Rafah Al Tinawie and Rola Kadi take a break to pray.

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    Teachers at the school are mostly devout Muslims. Between classes, teachers Rafah Al Tinawie and Rola Kadi take a break to pray.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Children play during recess. The school is overcrowded with 500 students and new students constantly arriving. In one recent week, 115 new students enrolled.

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    Children play during recess. The school is overcrowded with 500 students and new students constantly arriving. In one recent week, 115 new students enrolled.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Many children wrestle and participate in aggressive play during recess, while others eat snacks and socialize. This rough play can be common with traumatized children.

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    Many children wrestle and participate in aggressive play during recess, while others eat snacks and socialize. This rough play can be common with traumatized children.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Rola Kadi, a Syrian-American from Michigan, has been volunteering as an art teacher at the school.

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    Rola Kadi, a Syrian-American from Michigan, has been volunteering as an art teacher at the school.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

  • Children wait for minibuses to take them home after school. The school is free for Syrian children living in Turkey.

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    Children wait for minibuses to take them home after school. The school is free for Syrian children living in Turkey.

    Jodi Hilton for NPR

The war in Syria is taking a huge toll on the children. A United Nations team, which interviewed Syrian kids in a refugee camp in Turkey, found that three out of four have lost a family member. Almost half have post-traumatic stress disorder and elevated levels of depression.

There are efforts to help, but it's challenging. In the southern Turkish city of Gaziantep, the bell rings at 8 a.m. at the Friendship Elementary School.

Syrian kids, in fresh school uniforms, cram into desks, with more than 40 students in every classroom.

The Turkish government provided the new building, with a garden and brightly painted walls.

Syrian parents and volunteer teachers run this school, free of charge for the students, who number 270 and are increasing by the day.

Some Syrian children play at wrestling and fighting during recess at the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children. This type of play can be common among children who have witnessed traumatic events.

Some Syrian children play at wrestling and fighting during recess at the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children. This type of play can be common among children who have witnessed traumatic events.

Jodi Hilton for NPR

The volunteer teachers offer the Syrian curriculum from textbooks collected from schools that have closed back home.

"Arabic, English, Turkish, art, everything," says Manal Khamis, who teaches English.

Working With Traumatized Children

The school offers a few hours of normalcy for the children, but the war in Syria has already warped their lives.

Khamis recalls a boy who enrolled within days of fleeing the northern city of Aleppo after a bomb exploded in front of his house.

"He couldn't speak for three days," says Khamis.

And so the teachers encouraged the silent boy to draw.

"He draws only windows â€"- closed windows â€"- and then he opened the window. Why? We don't know. We asked him, 'What do you mean by the open window?' But he can't speak," Khamis says.

All the kids were sad when they were forced to leave home, says Khamis, who does her best to cheer her students.

These teachers were forced out, too. They are part of the professional class in Aleppo, Syria's largest city and its business capital.

Teacher Rafah Al Tinawie counsels a student outside class at the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children. Al Tinawie says many children show signs of trauma and she sometimes meets with parents to discuss the problems the children are facing.

Teacher Rafah Al Tinawie counsels a student outside class at the Albashayer School for Syrian Refugee Children. Al Tinawie says many children show signs of trauma and she sometimes meets with parents to discuss the problems the children are facing.

Jodi Hilton for NPR

They bring specialized skills to this overcrowded school in Turkey. Manar Munal Hasan, a medical doctor, is now the school phycolocigst. She says she sees signs of trauma.

"They often times get into fights and often I call their parents to come and to solve what has happened, and even the parents are surprised," Hasan says. The parents tell her: "Our children did not behave like this, they did not behave like that."

Feeling Insecure

And though the children are now in a safe area in southern Turkey, many say they don't feel secure and worry about relatives still in Syria.

"All of my relatives, and my grandparents, are in Syria and I don't have anyone to play with," says Yaman, age 7, who comes from Aleppo. "They might die. many things can happen."

A new study warns that Syrian children are the hidden casualty of the war.

Researchers from Turkish, American and Norwegian universities interviewed more than 300 children in a refugee camp on the Turkish border.

They released preliminary findings at a news conference in Washington, and Dr. Selcuk Sirin, a psychology professor at New York University, says they are distrubing.

"We are talking about a very traumatized group," Sirin says. "If we do not do our job as an international community of adults, these kids will go untreated with high levels of depression, high levels of PTSD. This will come back and haunt us in the future."

The warning about a haunting future can be heard clearly in an old apartment building in Antakya, Turkey, which also serves as a school for Syrian refugees.

Rahaf Tinowi, who is only 20, works as the school councilor and she says the children have been damaged by the war.

They often dream about killing Syria's president, Bashar Assad, she says.

"Not all the families, but a lot of them, are always teaching the children, 'We have to kill them, to kill, kill, kill, all the family of Bashar,'" she says. "So that's our job. We have to change these views."

And it is a very hard job to change those views, she says quietly, after all that these children have witnessed.

 
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