Syria’s
lost generation is Europe’s ‘time bomb’
By Sebnem Arsu
9/23/15, 5:30 AM CET
http://www.politico.eu/article/syrias-lost-generation-is-europes-time-bomb/
ISTANBUL — It’s
8 p.m. and 13-year-old Mohammed has just returned home from work in a
remote Istanbul suburb, an hour-long bus ride away. His mother has
anxiously been waiting for him, and is breastfeeding his infant
brother.
Sweat runs down
Mohammed’s temples, as if he had just been playing soccer with
friends. Instead, he spent the day working in a textiles workshop,
where he earns the money to feed his five other family members.
“It is not my will
to work. I want to go to school,” he says, exhausted and avoiding
eye contact as he brushes the hair away from his forehead.
* * *
Mohammed’s family
fled Syria in 2014. He had been the top student in his district in
Aleppo before Assad’s forces flattened the school. He has had no
formal education since.
Now he looks after
his 3-month-old brother, 11-year-old sister, 5-year-old brother, his
mother and his father, who was blinded during a beating in an Aleppo
prison. They live in a mold-infested one-room basement apartment in
Istanbul’s Fatih neighborhood. He’s had to shelve his dreams of
becoming a doctor.
There are 25 formal
refugee camps in southern Turkey, but the vast majority of the nearly
2 million Syrian refugees in Turkey live outside the camps. Istanbul
hosts the largest such Syrian community, and of the 330,000 Syrian
refugees living in the city, 83,000 are school-age children. Only a
quarter receive some form of education, according to the Syrian
Education Commission, the de facto educational authority of the
Syrian opposition active in Syria and Turkey. The system suffers from
limited funds, facilities and infrastructure, and has left many
children behind, say Syrian education activists.
Although the Turkish
government has set out a policy to accommodate Syrian children in its
public schools, the complex registration process and the language
barrier discourage parents from signing their children up for a
system that is already overloaded and offers no preparatory classes.
The system suffers
from limited funds, facilities and infrastructure, and has left many
children behind
“I put my children
into a Turkish school but Turkish children treated them badly, making
fun of their limited Turkish,” said Eman Izi, 36, whose husband
runs an Islamic clothing business in Istanbul. “They were going to
school but without understanding anything so we had to put them into
a Syrian school.”
Eman and her husband
now pay 100 Turkish lira ($32) per month for each of their three
children to attend a private Syrian education center, whose quality
is far inferior to what they experienced in Damascus before the war
began, Izi said. Compared to the price of private education in
Turkey, these are modest sums. But many parents are unable to afford
the expense. As a result, their children have no access to any kind
of schooling.
Instead, they beg or
sell tissues and bottled water in busy traffic at junctions and on
highways throughout Istanbul. Others, like Mohammed, work in the
backstreet sweatshops that are taking advantage of a growing pool of
migrant labor.
* * *
Drugs and
exploitation are a common threat for street children, but Syrian and
Turkish education activists are now mostly concerned about the
influence of extremist religious groups who target minors on the
streets or at unofficial education centers that are not closely
supervised by relevant authorities.
“Some teenagers we
interviewed last year talked about being subjected to Islamic State
propaganda; ideas like the West killing Muslims instead of the Assad
regime,” said Dr. Abdulrahman Kowara, the 58-year-old director of
the Syrian Education Commission.
“We immediately
took action, tried to revert the damage in constant dialogue with
these children, but it’s physically impossible to track down these
illegal centers one by one in a mega-metropolis like Istanbul with 14
million people.”
Turkey’s Education
Ministry started to formally recognize temporary education centers
established by Syrian aid organizations in September 2014. But there
are still an unknown number of unregistered education centers that
have yet to apply. So far, only 54 centers have been authorized in
Istanbul, the local Education Ministry office said. The Syrian
Education Commission supports these centers in providing free
textbooks for children, developing a pool of Syrian teachers for
recruitment and offering bursaries for children of low- or no-income
families.
But students won’t
receive a diploma or any proof of attendance. In a country where
certificates are a prerequisite for a good job or a credible
university education, parents come to consider these makeshift
educational centers as a waste of time and effort.
“We try to keep
tabs on these centers, but is it sufficient? Of course, not”
The Education
Ministry argues that it takes more than school premises and textbooks
provided by the Syrian Education Commission — albeit in compliance
with the Syrian national curriculum — to qualify for
internationally acceptable diplomas.
“They have their
own teachers, their own system, and all we do is superficial
monitoring,” said a local education ministry official who spoke on
the condition of anonymity. “For the sake of uniformity in Turkish
education, these centers should be inspected thoroughly and not be
allowed to turn into Trojan horses, bearing numerous risks, including
ideological indoctrination.”
Turkish education
activists criticize the lack of language support in public schools,
something which would allow Syrian and other refugee children to
benefit from licensed education. They also highlight the importance
of closer monitoring of alternative Syrian education centers.
“There has
recently been an educational void in Turkey. Nowhere is being
inspected properly,” said Dikmen Onat, chairwoman of the All
Teachers Syndicate, one of Turkey’s education labor unions. “As a
teacher, I strongly support the right to education but demand
thorough inspections of all Arabic education centers so that we do
not end up with a phenomenon like the Islamic State in Turkey in the
future.”
Syrian education
activists agree.
“We try to keep
tabs on these centers, but is it sufficient? Of course, not,” said
Kowara of the Syrian Education Commission. “There might be
unregistered centers out there funded by unknown foundations or
parties. We inform the ministry as soon as we detect them but
ultimately we need a better centralized system.”
The commission
officials regularly stroll around main junctions and streets in
Istanbul in an attempt to find school-age children who are out
begging or working illegally, register them in schools, and help them
to fill the gaps in their education before they find the opportunity
to take up their studies with their age group again.
* * *
The secluded
entrance of Efdalzade Mosque, located on a busy Fatih side street,
opens out onto a tranquil courtyard. The sounds of children reciting
their times tables can be heard through open windows.
Once used for public
Koran studies, four tiny rooms in the 15th-century mosque have
recently been converted to classrooms for Syrian children who could
not join Syrian temporary schools because of the gaps in their
education.
“Turkish schools
said they had no places and Syrian schools are expensive,” said Ali
Ezzo, 11, whose parents left Aleppo with six children two years ago.
His Turkish is fluent. Wearing low-rise jeans, a red plaid shirt, an
oversized red watch and a spikey hair-do, the boy had the style of a
typical urban Turkish youth. “I used to sell water, now I translate
for real estate agents. I want to come to school as long as they
accept me there for free.”
Ali was seven years
old when he stopped going to school in Aleppo. At age 9 he had lost
all of his literacy skills and was selling bottled water when Syrian
Education Commission officials spotted him on a street in Fatih. That
was four months ago. He is now in third grade and joins morning
classes for four hours every day before going to work to help his
father support the family. Like his fellow students, Ali studies the
Koran for half an hour and Arabic and other subjects for the rest of
the morning.
Nine-year-old
Ramazan Shabo, still struggles with first grade Arabic, and squints
as he tries to follow his teacher’s writing on the board. He
constantly fiddles with the broken glasses that are held together
with tape.
“I go to the Fatih
mosque to sell tissues after school. I like it here but have to work
to pay our rent,” he said. “I miss Aleppo. It was a better life
there.”
The Syrian Education
Commission has set up 15 similar preparatory centers of its own in
Istanbul. The goal is to establish at least 100, staffed with
psychological counselors for children who have been traumatized by
the conflict, Kowara said.
“When the
description on the wired [donation] says ‘Syria,’ the transfer
gets blocked or sent back”
The commission
raises awareness for projects that require funding through an
international network of contacts, and has received large donations
from private donors and international aid groups. Almost all have
been blocked by the United States’ monetary authorities.
\
“When the
description on the wired U.S. dollar amount says ‘Syria,’ the
transfer gets blocked or sent back,” Kowara said. “If we had
received all the funds wired to us without any problem last year,
two-thirds of our children would not have been out in the streets
today. We’re fully transparent, all about education and cannot
comprehend such restrictions.”
The commission tries
to fill the gap with donations from locals or the Turkish state,
which has already spent more than $4.5 billion on Syrian refugees
since the beginning of the conflict in 2011.
The European Union
Trust Fund, a new initiative part of the pact’s regional strategy
to combat the ISIL threat, launched its first project to support
Syrian refugees on September 14: €17.5 million to improve access to
education and provide psychosocial support to more than 200,000
Syrian children in Turkey.
“Syria is losing a
whole generation to war and exile,” said Federica Mogherini, High
Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and
Vice-President of the European Commission, in a written statement. “A
pen and a book can give hope to Syrian children. They are the best
weapon against hatred and radicalization.”
At least 320,000 of
Turkey’s nearly 2 million Syrian refugees have no plans to return
to Syria, and want to either stay in Turkey or resettle in Europe or
the U.S., according to a recent survey by the Xsight Social Research
Institute based in London, education of these minors was no longer an
issue for Turkey alone, activists claimed.
“These children,
if left uneducated, will harm Syria, Turkey and the entire world in
the future,” Kowara said, flipping through the pages of Arabic
textbooks that had arrived from the printing house.
“I see these
children as time bombs, ready to explode any time. I see the
expression of detachment on their faces. It is up to the world to
help the future generations of Syria as much as their own.”
Sebnem Arsu is an
Istanbul-based journalist who has been covering Turkey and its region
for the New York Times, Reuters and Associated Press for over 15
years.
Authors:
Sebnem Arsu
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário