Syrian Children In Turkey
The father of Ismail, a 10-year-old Syrian child, could
not enroll his son in Syrian schools in Istanbul because he is unable
to pay the tuition fees (an average of $100 per semester). Instead, he
preferred to have Ismail work at a sewing factory that is close to their
house in a poor neighborhood, so he could help his parents meet the
cost of living in the Turkish city. Ismail, who works from 9 a.m. to 6
p.m., is paid 400 Turkish lira per month [$178]. Yet, he is convinced,
or rather his parents have convinced him, that his future in the factory
will help him have a decent profession, while educational degrees will
not help him earn a living in this foreign country.
The suffering of Ismail and other Syrian children have
doubled abroad. They are living in a new country where tuition fees
are unaffordable, and working a hard and exhausting job with one day
off, on Sunday, which Ismail takes advantage of to play ball with his
Syrian and Turkish peers in his small neighborhood.As for Ahmad Rawas, 13, his life and familial circumstances have forced him to work in a Turkish restaurant from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. as a waiter and a delivery boy. He goes back to his small house exhausted, but the 1,200 lira [$534] per month he gets are very necessary to provide for his mother and four siblings. On days he does not show up at work for being sick or extremely tired, 40 lira [$17] is deducted from his salary. Still, despite sickness and fatigue, he goes to work the next day, induced by both the responsibility and need.
Amer, 11, stands in the Aksaray district in central Istanbul to sell Syrian bread to Syrian and Arab pedestrians, under the summer sun and in the winter cold. Sometimes, he works long hours to sell the bread he has, as it will become spoiled on the next day. Amer spoke to Al-Hayat about his work and said that it is much better than begging and smuggling Syrian cigarettes — a phenomenon luring many Syrian children, and which the Turkish government has recently begun fighting. He said that he has forgotten the meaning of education and school, which he has been missing for two years now. He bitterly remembered his old school, which was bombed in Maarrat al-Numan (in Idlib province).
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