Baltimore Sun Sunday

School back on in Aleppo as parents weigh options

- By Louisa Loveluck

Five years of war have brought a new curriculum to eastern Aleppo’s schoolchil­dren.

“My 8-year-old son knows all the weapons. He hears the sounds and says, ‘Dad, that was a barrel bomb. Dad, that was shelling,’ ” said Ali al-Halabi, a father of three.

Out in the streets, children scavenge for bomb fragments, bullet casings and tiny ball bearings as if they were treasures. “This is their childhood now,” alHalabi said.

According to aid agencies, 100,000 children lived in the neighborho­ods of rebel-held eastern Aleppo when the area fell under government siege in June. Now, the neighborho­ods are being bombarded, and, according to doctors, these young ones are the biggest casualties. At least 300 children have been killed or injured in the past 10 days, a rate attributed to their small frames and softer skulls.

But deep undergroun­d, against the odds, one semblance of normality continues. The new semester began this month in several basement classrooms across the city, and, come midafterno­on, the babble of returning schoolchil­dren made some in east Aleppo feel that their neighborho­ods were still alive.

“They were sounds I used to hate before. Now I just love it,” said Wissam Zarqa, an English teacher from east Aleppo, a city that was once home to 3 million people. “The noise children make in their break has become a sign of life.”

An estimated 97 percent of primary school-age children were in school before Syria’s crisis began in 2011. In eastern Aleppo today, enrollment stands at just 6 percent, according to Save the Children.

Through displaceme­nt and poverty, many have dropped out or can attend only sporadical­ly. Parents have also been afraid to send their children for fear that they will be targeted.

According to Save the Children, seven teachers and five students have been killed in their undergroun­d schools since June.

“What use is English and math if my boys are killed as they learn? We wish we could send them,” said Hassan, a parent who spoke on the condition that only his first name be used out of fear for the safety of relatives who have fled to government-held areas.

Some parents still believe the classes bring benefits that outweigh the risks. “Education and knowledge is the only passport for these children’s futures, and, even in these difficult circumstan­ces, some of the students are quite brilliant,” al-Halabi said. “When a child is achieving, you forget the dangers outside.” But, as in many families, his opinion has led to arguments with his wife, who spends hours each day just waiting for her sons’ safe return.

Aid agencies say children who are not in school are more vulnerable to child labor, early marriage or recruitmen­t by armed groups.

Fear and violence condition the behavior of most children in the Aleppo area. At home, they play war games and hoard piles of shrapnel. At school, teachers say, they are often withdrawn or violent.

The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child has warned that it will take decades for the area’s children to heal from the mental trauma of war.

 ?? ALEXANDER KOTS/KOMSOMOLSK­AYA PRAVDA ?? Children peer from a partially destroyed home in war-torn Aleppo, Syria, earlier this year.
ALEXANDER KOTS/KOMSOMOLSK­AYA PRAVDA Children peer from a partially destroyed home in war-torn Aleppo, Syria, earlier this year.

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