Tuesday, 9 February 2016

The Washington Post: Syrian Refugees

UNHCR

LETTING THEIR VOICES BE HEARD

In October, Washington Post photographer Linda Davidson and I set off for Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon to report on the Syrian refugee crisis, one of the largest forced migrations of people since World War II.

Our goal was to document the size and complexity of the crisis, showing its effects on the lives of individual refugees as well as the lasting impacts on the countries hosting them.
We broke the crisis down into 18 personal stories of a wide range of refugees.
Linda and I interviewed and photographed widows and orphans, the wealthy, the wounded, children and the elderly, those surviving in camps, and those suffering in urban slums. To capture the full range of refugee life, we witnessed a birth and a wedding, classrooms and operating rooms, and we visited a cemetery where families mourned not just for their dead, but for the fact that they are buried in foreign soil.
We saw terrible misery and inspiring stories of resilience and survival. We hope the portraits of these refugees, and the nations struggling to help them, will further an understanding of one of the most daunting human crises in recent memory.
These people, and these countries, will never be the same.
— Kevin Sullivan
UNHCR and our partners are currently addressing the concerns of 4,598,691 refugees who are directly affected by the violence in Syria.
Unfortunately, the projections in 2013 indicate a continued outpouring of refugees to neighboring countries with an uncertain timetable for return.
HCR and our partners are currently addressing the concerns of 4,598,691 refugees who are directly affected by the violence in Syria.
Unfortunately, the projections in 2013 indicate a continued outpouring of refugees to neighboring countries with an uncertain timetable for return.
 and our partners are currently addressing the concerns of 4,598,691 refugees who are directly affected by the violence in Syria.
Unfortunately, the projections in 2013 indicate a continued outpouring of refugees to neighboring countries with an uncertain timetable for return.

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