Iraqi refugees share their stories
Sharon Watkins, General Minister and President of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) shares the stories of Iraqi refugees she met during her recent visit to the Middle East.
Sharon Watkins, General Minister and President of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) shares the stories of Iraqi refugees she met during her recent visit to the Middle East.
Three moms are sitting across the table from us in a Beirut clinic. Three Iraqi moms far from home. Pretty sure they’ll never be able to go back. At least not like it is now.
Lelia never once stops crying. Every time she about gets herself together, the tears well up again and drop down her cheeks. She’s been in Lebanon three years already – since the beginning of the war. Sahira, more composed (or is it resigned?) has been here for ten years – since the beginning of the first Gulf War.
{mosimage}Ranna, only three months a refugee, has three year old Ricardo on her lap. We smile – the same name as my husband, Rick. Rick is in his “dad” mode, making faces at Ricardo, trying to get him to laugh.
We hear the women’s stories: “We used to live in peace with our Muslim neighbors – we knew the birthdays of each other’s children. But now it’s all disorder. People come to kidnap our sons, to threaten our daughters.”
“We owned our own shop. Now we have nothing.”
Tears are welling in all our eyes now.
Two and a half million refugees from Iraq (the US has accepted to resettle 14,000). Most are in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon – bursting those small countries at the seams, exhausting local relief efforts, introducing inflationary pressure, raising concerns that moderate, secularized countries where Christian and Muslim have lived side by side in peace, will be irreversibly destabilized.
In Lebanon, a newly-arrived refugee family receives fifty dollars from our partners to help with food, a change of clothes, medicine, school supplies, rent. A drop in the bucket of their need.
In Syria, forty dollars feeds a family of four for two weeks. Our partners struggle to feed 500 families in Aleppo – $20,000 for one food delivery. In Damascus that two week food delivery costs $600,000 for the one hundred fifty thousand destitute families our partners are feeding there. Local churches are overwhelmed.
“These people were teachers, engineers,” we are told. “They came with some money in their pockets. They have nice clothes on. They don’t look destitute. But they are destitute. They are used to being the ones who give. Now they have to receive.”
{mosimage}The moms have left the room – off to their appointments.
“How do you keep going in the face of all this?” I ask the social worker.
“I have a roof over my head,” she says. “What right do I have to be overwhelmed?”
I ask the same of our Greek Orthodox partner in Damascus. “The people are so grateful,” he says. “You see the relief in their faces. Besides. This is what Jesus would do. We have to respond. We must keep going.”
(General Minister and President, Sharon Watkins was in the Middle East in October to attend a World Council of Churches meeting hosted by the Greek Orthodox church in Damascus, Syria. While there she also traveled to Jerusalem and Beirut to meet with church leaders and our global ministries overseas staff to learn about our critical presence there.)