If you had to flee, what would you carry? | HuffPost - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 5, 2024, 12:57 AM | Calgary | 1.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Posted: 2017-03-07T20:37:31Z | Updated: 2017-03-07T20:38:12Z If you had to flee, what would you carry? | HuffPost

If you had to flee, what would you carry?

If you had to flee, what would you carry?
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.
Open Image Modal

Shiraz Shoibi, 38, holds her most treasured possession: a small, hot-pink purse that her husband gave her just before he was killed.

Crystal Wells/International Medical Corps

Two hundred fifty miles.

That is how far Shiraz Shoibi, 38, traveledmostly by foot and aided by smugglersfrom her home town of Deir er-Zour in eastern Syria to Azaz on the Turkish border. The journey took four months, walking through olive groves and on backroads before creeping into safe houses at night for a few hours sleep. She worried constantly about landmines and being caught by ISIS.

Shiraz was in Azaz when fighting flared. She was caught in the crossfire, suffered deep wounds to her abdomen and broke her femur. The nearest field hospital inside Syria was not equipped to treat such severe injuries, and Shiraz was rushed across the border into Turkey, where she spent 45 days in the hospital going through numerous surgeries trying to repair her shattered body.

Through it all, Shiraz kept one prized possession: a hot-pink purse that her husband gave her just before he was killed in the war. We were only married a short time, she said, holding the bag close to her heart.

I met Shiraz in Kilis, a Turkish town just across the border from Azaz, while traveling with International Medical Corps rehabilitation team, which provides physical therapy to Syrians with disabilitiesmostly from war wounds like hers. In sharing everything she had gone through, from fleeing ISIS in Deir er-Zour to nearly losing her life in Azaz, the only time she cries is when she shows me the purseher only remaining keepsake of her late husband and a symbol of the life that was taken from her by Syrias relentless and brutal civil war.

Once a stable middle-income country known for its deep, rich culture, Syria is now synonymous with a level of human suffering so horrific that is almost impossible to fully comprehend. In March, Syria will mark the grimmest of milestone: six years of war that has reduced cities to rubble, claimed nearly a half a million livesa sizable number of them civiliansand fueled a massive exodus of humanity that has sent countless thousands of families searching for refuge in camps and communities across the Middle East or offering smugglers their life savings for the chance to clamber aboard unsteady inflatable dinghies bound for Europe.

The scale of displacement is overwhelming: nearly five million Syrians are registered as refugees in neighboring countries, while another one million have applied for asylum in Europe. More than six million are displaced from their homes inside Syria. In total, well over half Syrias pre-war population of around 21 million has been displaced by war, with many of them deciding to resettle elsewhere permanently.

The sheer size of these figures distracts us from the reality that each and every one of the 12 million forced from their homes is a person whose life has been torn apart and whose future hangs in the balance as the war rages on and countries debate whether to open or slam their doors to them.

For these families, leaving home isnt a choice. Its a matter of life-and-deaththe only way to live without the fear of losing the ones they love to airstrikes, barrel bombs, sniper fire or, like Shiraz, the brutality of ISIS rule. Many have just a few short minutes to make snap decisions on what to bring before leaving it all behind, not knowing whenor ifthey will come back.

If you had to flee, what would you carry?

For Shiraz, it was her pink clutch. For Fadila Karam, a 15-year-old girl who is now wheelchair-bound after being wounded during an airstrike outside Aleppo, it was a memory card with family photographs. And tragically, for some, like Gahida Alsaaid, there was nothing left to recover.

Last January, Gahida was sitting with 13 members of her family, including her four children, in their home in Idleb when a bomb fell from the sky. She was the sole survivor. Her left arm had to be amputated and today is living in a small Turkish town near the countrys border with Syria. Here, she tries to navigate life far from home, without her family.

Despite losing everything, Gahidas greatest hope is to go back to Syria when the war ends. Until then, she just wants a safe home, something she, Shiraz, and millions of other Syrians have been robbed ofand have no promise of finding again any time soon.

What is the one thing youd take if you had to leave your home? Millions of men, women, and children escaped the violent war in Syria with only what they could carry. International Medical Corps and the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation launched The Things We Carry to feature the children, women, and men who fled six years of warand what they carried with them to safety.

Your Support Has Never Been More Critical

Other news outlets have retreated behind paywalls. At HuffPost, we believe journalism should be free for everyone.

Would you help us provide essential information to our readers during this critical time? We can't do it without you.

Support HuffPost