Essay sample library > Restoring childhood: humanitarianism and growing up Syrian in Za`tari refugee camp

Restoring childhood: humanitarianism and growing up Syrian in Za`tari refugee camp

2023-09-29 09:01:24

Approximately 44,000 people out of the 80,000 Syrians living in the Za`tari refugee camp in Jordan are under 18 years of age. In this article we will explore the childhood of evacuation centers in this humanitarian space. The humanitarian organizations of Za`tari believe that children have lost their childhood due to past trauma of war and evacuation to the present refugee camp. Based on the excursions by ethnographic magazines, this paper will examine how NGOs aim to "revive" these lost childhoods through promotion of youth, promotion of representatives, and review of how to return to Syria in the future We will explore our efforts. Children-friendly space By interacting with aid workers during programming, children learn new skills, expand social circle, and set goals for the future. Children are also active live navigators of camps. The authors argue that by tailoring the childhood brought up by the Child Friendly Center to personal circumstances, it has built a more complex and Syrian identity than non-political Syrians encouraged by NGOs. wrong. In response to the humanitarian discourse of the lost Syrian generation, the author's material is based on the experience of Za`tari and the subtle generation (rather than lost) generation based on the idea of ​​rebuilding Dalua, I will clarify

On the eve of the first World Humanitarian Summit, I entered the world of Syrah, a 12 year old Syrian girl who lives in the Za'atari refugee camp in Jordan. When Sidra speaks each scene through camping, her tent, gym, internet cafe, football field, I turn around and check the details to find intimacy. When a group of children I could not see was poured into my body, I remembered the sense of entering a refugee camp, the way the children first came to you. In some precious moments in dusty confusion, I am with my people. I peeled off my mask from my face and entered the luxury hotel's ballroom again. This is the reality of the world of Istanbul Summit - this city protects hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees, but Syrians are just fantasies

Approximately 44,000 people out of the 80,000 Syrians living in the Za`tari refugee camp in Jordan are under 18 years of age. In this article we will explore the childhood of evacuation centers in this humanitarian space. The humanitarian organizations of Za`tari believe that children have lost their childhood due to past trauma of war and evacuation to the present refugee camp. Based on the excursions by ethnographic magazines, this paper will examine how NGOs aim to "revive" these lost childhoods through promotion of youth, promotion of representatives, and review of how to return to Syria in the future We will explore our efforts. Children-friendly space By interacting with aid workers during programming, children learn new skills, expand social circle, and set goals for the future. Children are also active live navigators of camps.