Saturday, August 24, 2013
Syria
Saturday, August 24, 2013 by DXTR corporation
Syria's lost youth: One million child refugees flee brutal civil war
By Gregory Beals, Special to CNN
August 23, 2013 -- Updated 1933 GMT (0333 HKT)
A bullet taken from the leg of a wounded refugee.
HIDE CAPTION
Syria's lost youth
STORY HIGHLIGHT
- UNHCR says there are now one million Syrian child refugees
- He describes the tragic fate of young Syrian children forced to flee their homes
- UN human rights watchdog says 7,000 children have lost their lives in the conflict
Editor's note: Gregory Beals is a regional writer covering the Syrian refugee crisis for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
(CNN) -- Nine-year-old Dia'a sat in the back of his
father's car on the cool afternoon when a sniper fired a bullet at his
heart. His brother Alaa, 15, was seated next to him. Their father sped
through the streets desperate to flee shelling that was destroying their
neighborhood in Dara'a, in southwest Syria.
The father saw a roadblock and decided to turn around. It was then that the sniper pulled the trigger.
Gregory Beals
The bullet pierced
Dia'a's chest, missing the boy's heart by millimeters. Then it careened
through his left shoulder and ricocheted into Alaa. Dia'a looked to his
left and saw his brother slumped over. Nothing could stop him from
passing into death.
Dia'a bled profusely. He
did not feel his torso, only the pain that "cut my shoulder," he said.
He was rushed to the border and then to a Jordanian hospital. He had
lost more than half of the blood in his body. Doctors pumped him full of
several units of blood and closed the wounds. The surgery took an hour.
Dia'a's mother,
46-year-old Ameena, thanked God for her son's survival. But in myriad
ways, war had sapped her capacity for gladness. It felt like something
inconceivable, physically impossible. "I can't be happy even if Dia'a is
still alive," she said. "I've lost [my other] son and I cannot be
happy."
Syria's war is killing
and maiming the youngest and most innocent members of society. According
to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, some 7,000
children, including 1,600 under the age of 10, have lost their lives. At
least one million Syrian children are now refugees. Four million of
Syria's population of 20 million has been displaced internally. Half of
those are children.
Losing a generation of Syrian children
Syria's children traumatized by war
UNICEF: Syria risks a lost generation
The indiscriminate
shelling and bombing of villages and the destruction of schools and
hospitals have forced Syrian youngsters and their families to take
flight. When they can, the wounded victims straggle across a border to a
hospital. The injured, dead and dying pass before doctors and nurses in
neighboring Jordan who now have a unique understanding of how war
damages and terminates human lives.
"I would say that 50
percent of the injuries we see are caused by shelling. We see crush
injuries from falling buildings," said Abdulla Ibrahim, a Syrian surgeon
working in Jordan whose name has been changed out of fears for his
family. "The other 50 percent are from sniper fire and gunshots."
Dr. Ibrahim becomes
emotional when he speaks of young patients he has encountered. He
remembers 4-year-old Mohammed, who crossed into Jordan from Syria with
two broken legs, a fractured skull, two broken arms and a smashed pelvis
after his home caved in during intensive shelling.
Like others in Jordan,
Ibrahim monitors YouTube channels posted by doctors in field hospitals
in Syria. Monitoring potential arrivals allows him to prepare for
incoming patients. He had seen the video of Mohammed just after his
injury and thought it would be a miracle if the boy survived. After
several surgeries Mohammed pulled through and now lives with his mother
in Jordan's Za'atri camp.
Continued existence is
only a first step. Syria's children must learn to survive even their
survival. If the removal of painful memories would bring them peace,
most survivors of Syria's war would gladly comply. But memory is a
silent intelligence that refuses exile. What cannot be said becomes the
shadow of that which is spoken. The recollections of children are no
exception to this fact.
Jordan overflowing with Syrian refugees
Syria's scarred children
UNICEF struggles to help Syrian refugees
The memory of the moment
the rockets rained down on his home comes to 15-year-old Ahmed in
ghostlike fragments. He recalls that there were five rockets in total
and that after the first landed his instinct was to run out of the
house. Ahmed, his brother, mother, aunt and grandfather were outside of
their home when the second rocket landed nearby. His 5-month-pregnant
mother held his 3-year-old brother in her arms. The shrapnel burned
through her torso and killed her instantly. Ahmed lay on the ground
bleeding with shrapnel wounds in his leg.
Ahmed remembers being in
an ambulance with perhaps six or seven other people stacked up in bunks
along the side of the vehicle. "I was in the ambulance. I thought about
my family," he said. "I didn't think about my injury at all. I was
wondering when my family would come. I knew that my grandfather was
there in the ambulance. I wondered where my mother was; where my little
brother was."
It is hard for Ahmed to
rid himself of these images. They live inside of the wound that has
forced him to live on crutches. He no longer wants to grow up to become a
photographer or a teacher or a football player. "I want to be a
fighter," he tells me. "I want to join the resistance."
As much as assistance is
needed for Syrians, so too is a sense of hope. Twelve-year-old Iman
lost the lower part of her right leg after her street was shelled last
October in a small village in the Golan Heights. Her two brothers, one
older and one younger, died in the incident. Her older sister was
injured.
Iman cries softly as her
mother describes the death of her brothers. To be sure there are times
when she explodes into fits of rage after being forced to live her life
without her leg. But there is a quiet resilience behind her weeping. She
thinks of her brothers, sisters and other family members who have
survived. "I want to be a doctor," she says. "I want to help people who
are like me."
Source:CNN News International
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1 Responses to “Syria”
October 11, 2013 at 4:47 PM
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