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Welcome to SOS Children

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Welcome to SOS Children s Villages Syria SOS Children have worked in Syria since 1981 There are 2 SOS Children s Villages: Qodsaya Near Damascus Cares for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to SOS Children


1
Welcome to SOS Childrens Villages
2
Syria
  • SOS Children have worked in Syria since 1981
  • There are 2 SOS Childrens Villages
  • Qodsaya
  • Near Damascus
  • Cares for children in family houses
  • Children go to school and have lots of
    opportunities
  • Has an SOS Youth Home for those nearing
    independence.
  • Aleppo
  • Opened in 1998
  • Has 12 family houses
  • Has an SOS Nursery which looks after children
    from the local community too
  • Has links to an SOS Youth Home run specifically
    for girls
  • Has its own Social Centre which runs community
    outreach programmes such as vocational training.

3
This is Amjad
Amjad is a refugee.
4
Amjad
  • Amjad had to flee his home after shells fell in
    front of his house.

I no longer want to go back home, I am afraid of
going back there. I used to hide in the kitchen
between the oven and the fridge, on the floor. I
closed by ears with my fingers so that I didnt
hear the shelling and shooting. I will never go
back to our old house, we were so scared there.
Amjad, aged 12
5
What is a refugee?
  • 2 million Syrians are currently classed as
    refugees and half of these are children. But what
    is a refugee?
  • A person who has been forced to leave their
    country in order to escape war, persecution, or
    natural disaster. Many of them cannot return home
    or are afraid to do so.

6
Syrian refugees
  • 2 million refugees.
  • 720,000 in Lebanon, 520,000 in Jordan, 464,000 in
    Turkey (August 2013)
  • 1 million child refugees, 740,000 under the age
    of 11.
  • The majority live in refugee camps.

7
Zaatari refugee camp, Jordan
Source AP
8
Life as a refugee
  • Refugee camps often become home - many refugees
    end up living in refugee camps for years
  • Refugees need, and have a right to, all the
    things we do shelter, food, clean water,
    medical care and education.
  • But, it is difficult to provide these things in a
    refugee camp
  • - Lack of infrastructure
  • - Poor transport and communications
  • - Limited money
  • - Limited space
  • - Language barriers
  • Schools are very basic

9
Life as a refugeeSeparation
  • Many refugee children end up alone
  • Chaos of escape means children easily lose their
    parents and families.
  • In Syria, many children have lost parents in the
    conflict.
  • These children have to grow up fast missing out
    on their childhood.

10
Life as a refugeeFood health
  • Many refugees go hungry or eat a restricted diet
  • Diseases spread easily
  • Limited medical facilities and not many trained
    doctors and nurses

11
Life as a refugeeEducation
  • Children who flee in fear often have special
    problems
  • School helps them overcome this - it symbolises
    normality
  • They can learn about their own culture and
    country and spend time with other children
  • Education becomes a symbol of hope
  • Classrooms are very basic a tent or small
    building
  • Lessons are often held outside
  • There are often no desks and children sit on the
    floor
  • There are very few textbooks and stationary

12
Internally displaced people
An internally displaced person (IDP) is someone
who has been forced to flee from his or her home
for the same reason as a refugee, but has not
left his or her own country. Unlike refugees,
IDPs are not protected by international law or
eligible to receive many types of aid.
13
SOS Children supporting IDPs
  • Families are living in tiny rooms all over Syria,
    displaced from their homes.
  • They have left everything behind everyday
    survival is a struggle.
  • Finding milk to feed babies and young children is
    especially difficult as food prices are rising
    and transport links are destroyed.
  • SOS Children is supporting displaced families,
    providing them with things like milk.
  • Just 7.50 stands between families and buying
    enough milk to feed their infants.

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