Daily News

Home away from ‘hell’

Syrian orphans who survived bombardmen­t in Aleppo have finally been settled in a town that was once the hub for Islamic State militants, write Sarah el Deeb and Malak Harb

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NEARLY 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo after they appeared in a distressin­g video and appealed for their lives as government forces moved in under a hail of fire.

In the year and half since, the children and their instructor­s have been uprooted twice more – once to escape similar bombardmen­t in another rebel stronghold and again when they fled a town that has been overwhelme­d by people seeking shelter from Syria’s war.

The orphanage first establishe­d in rebel-held eastern Aleppo, known as the Centre for the Exceptiona­l, has finally landed in a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administra­tion since 2016.

More than 6 million people – nearly a quarter of Syria’s prewar population – have been displaced inside Syria because of the war. For Aleppo’s orphans, the war trauma and the loss of parents were compounded by the recurrent uprooting from the only familiar place they knew.

“It was better back home. We had our toys and our home. We had a court to play in and we had a toys room, a looms area, and a hall for learning singing,” said Yasmine Qamuz, an 11-year-old whose mother is missing and whose father died of a heart condition in Aleppo. Yasmine said she left her yellow doll behind in Aleppo.

The fall of Aleppo came after one of the most devastatin­g battles of the civil war, now in its eighth year. Syria’s largest city was for years divided between rebel- and government-controlled areas. After four years of rebel rule, the government recaptured eastern Aleppo in December 2016 after a months- long military offensive backed by Russia.

The bombardmen­t of eastern Aleppo drove residents – including the children – undergroun­d. One of the children was wounded by shrapnel when he tried to come up from the basement where they had hud- dled for weeks.

During the siege, the orphanage posted an online video in which Yasmine, the little girl, pleaded for an exit route.

Soon after, permission came for their evacuation. There was a hitch as last-minute negotiatio­ns over their destinatio­n delayed their departure. The children were encircled by gunmen for 22 hours in the buses meant to take them out of the crumbling enclave, until the deal was finally sealed.

First, they went to another rebel-held town in the neighbouri­ng province of Idlib. When that came under attack, they were moved north to the town of Azaz. But soon that was hit by a huge wave of displaced people, so they had to leave again.

Jarablus, a border town with just over 10 000 residents before the war, saw its population almost quadruple after the IS retreat as newly displaced Syrians moved in.

Still, it remains a small town. There are few places for the children to go. The only day trip they go on is to the river banks.

“They are city children,” said Hikmat Sheihan, one of the orphanage administra­tors. “In Aleppo, they had daily visitors or events.

“Here, there are no events and few visitors. Those with them in school are from different environmen­ts.”

Three children who lost their mother – an orphanage worker – and their father in the offensive are expected to be reunified with their extended families in Aleppo, for a visit.

“When we left we came here because it’s a safe area and there is no gunfire or shelling,” said Asmar al-Halabi, who founded the orphanage in 2015. But with the move, private donations also shrank as world attention shifted elsewhere.

On a recent afternoon, the children gathered in excitement because of visitors – an Associated Press team escorted by Turkish officials. Some of the boys were attending maths classes in the basement, even though school is on summer recess.

Girls sat in a circle and giggled as they said they prefer the summer because it means they don’t have to wake up early. In keeping with the holy month of Ramadaan, they read the Qur’an during the day and sleep early to wake up for the dawn meal. Many said they were fasting.

Al-Halabi, who the children refer to as Baba, or Dad, said the children still reminisce about Aleppo.

“All the kids’ memories are of Aleppo,” he said. “We wish we could go back.”

 ?? PICTURES: AP ?? Orphans from Aleppo sit in a circle in their room as they play at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, last month. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire....
PICTURES: AP Orphans from Aleppo sit in a circle in their room as they play at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, last month. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire....
 ??  ?? Batool Lababidi, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, stands outside her room at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria.
Batool Lababidi, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, stands outside her room at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria.
 ??  ?? Syrian orphan Noor Ghanem, 13, left, helps other orphans from Aleppo, as they study at the orphanage in Jarablus.
Syrian orphan Noor Ghanem, 13, left, helps other orphans from Aleppo, as they study at the orphanage in Jarablus.
 ??  ?? Boys pass time in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus.
Boys pass time in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus.

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