WED 27 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Dec 18, 2018
Source: The Daily Star
Families huddle below ground as winter grips Syria
Nazeer Al-Khatib| Agence France Presse
AL-BAB, Syria: After washing up her family’s dishes over a plastic basin, 11-year-old Cedra sits on the floor of the dank basement in Syria to tackle her day’s studies.A dark staircase leads from a street in the town of Al-Bab to the gloomy space that the young girl, her blind father and some 40 other families have the misfortune of calling home.

“There’s a single room which we use as a kitchen, a bathroom and a bedroom,” Cedra said.

She scribbled in her notepad, while crouched against a wall of bare cinder blocks and under a line of laundry trying to dry in the humid cellar.

The residents of this underground camp were displaced by the Syrian war, sometimes several times, mostly from the eastern province of Deir al-Zor.

Cedra’s family fled the city of Deir al-Zor in 2012, in the early stages of Syria’s conflict.

They took refuge in Raqqa, further west, but the city soon became the Syrian capital of Daesh’s (ISIS) self-proclaimed “caliphate.”

The subsequent bombardment of Raqqa, which was almost completely leveled, killed her mother and brother.

The girl and her father fled once more and eventually found their way to Al-Bab, a rebel-controlled area near the border with Turkey.

Cedra does not go school because she needs to help her blind father, but one of the other adults living in the basement has organized classes for her and a few other children. The war has set her back years in her education.

“I’m learning how to write the letters, it’s only been a few days,” said the girl, wearing a thick, red sweatshirt and a black headscarf.

Each morning, Cedra makes the bed, tidies the room, makes tea and prepares breakfast before studying.

Then it’s time to prepare lunch, after which she plays with the other children before getting to work on dinner.

Blankets are piled up near a flimsy foam mattress in one corner of the small room. A handful of cooking utensils and a plastic broom are tucked away nearby.

“Life in this basement is not easy,” said her father, Mohammad Ali al-Hassan, who hopes to return to Deir al-Zor.

“There is nothing to do here and no money,” said the greying father, who used to sustain his family by selling fruit and vegetable from a street cart.

A resident of Al-Bab made his basement available to the displaced in mid-2017.

The space is now divided in 42 tiny “studios,” one for each family.

Their food and other basic needs are provided for by local charities.

“The initial idea was to have a temporary shelter for people while they look for a housing solution,” said Abu Abdel-Rahman, who was also displaced from Deir al-Zor and acts as a kind of supervisor.

The place soon filled up and few of the families ever moved out for lack of affordable options.

“The smallest possible accommodation involves a rent of $100.

“Those you see here are those who can’t pay that amount.

“Here, everyone is experiencing a disastrous situation,” said the 59-year-old, who used to work in a textile factory.

Kneeling in front of a white board, a woolly hat pulled tightly down on his head, Abu Omar forms the letters of the Arabic alphabet, which his pupils recite in unison.

He lost a hand and the bones in his left leg were smashed to pieces after an airstrike hit his home in Deir al-Zor.

Abu Omar’s disabilities left him unable to work but he teaches 13 of the basement’s children. He said that number has dropped steadily.

“Many of them just have to go out and work. Because of their social condition, many families have to interrupt their children’s education,” he explained.

Umm Ghassak’s childhood came to an abrupt end when the war erupted and now, at 23, she is already a widow.

Her husband died of injuries sustained two years ago during bombardment on Albukamal, a former Daesh stronghold on the border with Iraq.

“We didn’t have enough money to treat him,” she said.

The young woman and her four-year-old daughter are totally reliant on the assistance they receive. “If nobody helps us, we just don’t eat.”


 
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