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Field diary: The stories you never forget
By Widad Hussein - Oct 25,2014 - Last updated at Oct 25,2014
“Please ma’am, can I share with you my story?” seven-year-old Ahmad (name changed) says with a very shy face. We are on a visit to a school in Amman. It’s the afternoon shift for Syrian students. “Yes, of course you can,” I reply immediately.
As an interpreter working with UNICEF Jordan, I travel across the country with my colleagues, responding to the Syrian refugee crisis. Through my work I hear many stories. Ahmad’s stayed in my mind.
“The soldiers broke into our house. They grabbed Baba (father) and started beating him with their guns. I saw blood come out of his face,” he whispered to me.
“I screamed the loudest I could at them, to let him go. It was in vain. Mum said that he was arrested, but I didn’t know what that meant. I just know that they took him far away. I couldn’t speak from that time, I lost my voice,” he said, holding back his tears.
Ahmad eventually made it to safety in Jordan. He is now one of the more than 100,000 Syrian children who have registered at schools across the country.
“I can speak again, I can read and write letters; the school made me speak again, I love school so much. The teachers and the principal are so kind to me. They told me that I can read stories for my dad when he is back,” Ahmad says with a smile.
He wanted to tell me this because he knows that his school is supported by UNICEF. For me, Ahmad’s story clearly highlights the importance of school, not just as a place of learning but one of healing.
In Jordan, UNICEF works with the Ministry of Education in managing double-shift schools where Jordanian children study in the morning, and Syrians in the afternoon. This increases the capacity of schools in areas where large numbers of Syrian refugees live, and provides learning opportunities for children desperate to continue their education.
The UN office in Amman contributed this article to The Jordan Times on the occasion of UN Day
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