Khaleej Times

Refugee rape survivor turns pain into power

- Heba Kanso

For about four years Sarah has gone around her community in the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon speaking with fellow female Syrian refugees who have been victims of sexual violence, comforting them and telling them about local services.

Her advice comes from the heart — having being raped twice herself. But Sarah, like many other women, has kept these attacks secret.

Although aid agencies have warned thousands of female refugees in camps or on the move live in fear of violence, including rape, many victims are too traumatise­d to speak out, so women like Sarah are being trained to step in and give support.

Sarah, 34, described a day in the first year of the Syrian civil war when she had to leave the Homs apartment she shared with her four children and husband to seek shelter in a basement with her daughters, then aged 11 and three, and 20 other women.

But at first light, after a night of intense gunfire, a group of about a dozen armed men stormed the basement, ordering the women to take off their clothes and line up.

“My daughter was telling me ‘Please mom, please take off your clothes,’” Sarah said her 11-yearold daughter begged her, fearing the men would kill them.

Homs, then Syria’s third largest city, was an early centre of the uprising against President Bashar Al Assad in 2011 that turned into a civil war, killing an estimated 465,000 people and forcing more than 11 million from their homes.

Sarah, whose name has been changed for security reasons, said in the middle of the attack a loud noise distracted the men and they ran out, allowing the women to escape.

Sarah found her husband and two sons and her family fled but, with gunfire surroundin­g them, a bullet struck one of her sons in the head, killing him immediatel­y.

“I held his hand. My husband was saying ‘leave him’ ... I left him there on the ground and ran. I kept looking back, but I had to flee,” she said, and her family left Syria a month later.

The former clothing store owner arrived in Lebanon hoping for a safer life but shortly after moving to the Bekaa Valley Sarah was raped again.

This time the attacker was a Lebanese man who came to the door offering financial services when she was alone at home — a warehouse shared with other families.

“I wanted to kill myself at first,” she said but knew she had to be strong for her children.

Sarah didn’t tell anyone about

She lived in silence for about three months but then sought help from an internatio­nal nongovernm­ent organisati­on in her community that gave her counsellin­g and eventually trained her on how to talk to survivors like herself

the rape, not even her husband, fearing he would blame her and maybe even kill her to clean their family name — a so-called “honour killing”.

She lived in silence for about three months but then sought help from an internatio­nal nongovernm­ent organisati­on in her community that gave her counsellin­g and eventually trained her on how to talk to survivors like herself. Roula Masri, a senior program manager at Abaad, a Beirut-based resource centre for gender equality, said there were many reasons why women did not report sexual violence or rape, ranging from honour killings to cultural shame.

Abaad last year recorded 861 reports of sexual violence in Lebanon based on security force figures, but campaigner­s fear the number is much higher, with thousands of vulnerable female refugees living in Lebanon.

Masri said Abaad has around a dozen women like Sarah who volunteer with them and believe it creates a greater impact when the support comes from a peer who has faced a similar struggle.

Sarah said she found other female refugees struggling to deal with sexual assault really listened to her as she encouraged them to be strong and not feel guilty.

As well as giving one-on-one support, Sarah passes on informatio­n to them about groups like Abaad that provide services such as additional counsellin­g and safe shelters. “Our ultimate goal is to have women not only survive violence and then continue their lives as individual­s, but have them mobilised in this driving force to really address violence against women,” said Masri.

Sarah said she has kept in touch with many of the women she has helped, saying they call her a role model and tell her they would have killed themselves if it wasn’t for her strength.

Personally she finds it hard to believe she’s moved past her pain by counsellin­g others but she has no plans to stop.

“I feel like I did something good and I have to spread this message to every woman that is in need of this,” said Sarah.

“These words give me power. I really live by these words.”

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