Thursday, March 10, 2016

Humans from Syria

“Everyone here has been very nice to us. When we got to the beach, there were people there who gave us food and a hug. A priest even gave us this carpet to pray on. He told us: ‘We have the same God.’”





Humans of New York is a blog. Founded by the Photo Journalist Brandon Stanton, his objective was first to capture the people of New York. There is so much diversity that he thought he could tell a story through their pictures. That soon led to writing brief stories with the picture. From New York, he went to prisons to talk about the people incarcerated. He loves to tell 'their' story-- whoever 'they' happen to be. With the recent refugee situation in Syria, he has decided to blog and create a photo journal of some of the refugees to inform the public of what is going on. 

I loved this picture. There are many emotions that are going on all around. In the previous post, this family is in front of the camera and the description depicts their story in the months prior to the picture that led up to their homelessness. They were recieving texts that they needed to pay their money to someone they did not know, they tried to ignore them and then they woke up with their home on fire. Shortly after, they got another text that they would be killed if they stayed. That is the fear that refugees around the word have to live with, HOW HORRIBLE? 

The brutal facts, 

More than 4.5 million refugees from Syria are in just five countries Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt:

  • Turkey hosts 2.5 million refugees from Syria, more than any other country worldwide
  • Lebanon hosts approximately 1.1 million refugees from Syria which amounts to around one in five people in the country
  • Jordan hosts approximately 635,324 refugees from Syria, which amounts to about 10% of the population
  • Iraq where 3.9 million people are already internally displaced hosts 245,022 refugees from Syria
  • Egypt hosts 117,658 refugees from Syria
The UN’s 2015 humanitarian appeal for Syrian refugees was just 61% funded by the end of the year.
Funding shortages mean that the most vulnerable Syrian refugees in Lebanon receive just $21.60 per person month or around US$0.70 cent a day for food assistance, well below the UN’s poverty line of US$1.90
86% of Syrian refugees in urban areas in Jordan are living below the local poverty line.

I am grateful for good people around the world that see a need and make a difference. At the top is the description to this photo, what a good man that preacher is. I too believe, as did the preacher, that we may be different by culture, religion, race, color-- whatever it may be-- but at the end of the day, "We have the same God."

You can follow Humans of New York @humansofny

UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), International Organization of Migration (IOM)

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Syria, the Cause of World War III?


Grieving Syrian man


Imagine living in a country with a President that many of the citizens have a hard time agreeing with. Some of the citizens do agree with the president and tensions rise that lead to violence and conflict. Other nations that agree with the president join forces with him and those opposing the president also band together. Over the course of 4 years, many would leave the country as a refugee, many would die in the country from the fighting, and other countries would have to support their allies as the tensions continued to rise. It is crazy to think that a disagreement over the choices of the president could cause that radical of a response but that is what is going on in Syria today.  Over 250,000 dead. The scariest part of it all is that we are involved in supporting the rebels and other super powers like Russia are engaged in supporting Syrian President, Mr. Assad. 

Could history repeat itself? We are so close to exactly what happened with alliances and ties in WWI and WWII. Axis vs. Allies. I pray that this can end soon before it escalates more.

To understand more about this unfortunate conflict, please read http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-26116868 or http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/16/world/middleeast/untangling-the-overlapping-conflicts-in-the-syrian-war.html?_r=0.