“Even Children of War Find Hope” Awake at Night

 

UNICEF Representative Bo Viktor Nylund meets 8-month-old Nur Al-Huda in Hasakah, northeast Syria, on 24 August 2020. Little Nur Al-Huda was born in a shelter in Hasakah city. She is the only child of Abdul Ghani, 37, and Jamila, 33, who fled their home in Atiq Al-Hawa village in rural Ras Al-Ain in October 2019 due to escalating violence. They took shelter in the Ridwan Al-Bajari; a school turned into a shelter. Nur Al-Huda suffers from malnutrition and she received treatment from a UNICEF-supported mobile medical team. “One month after our wedding, we were forced to displace, leaving behind our belongings and home that was stolen and destroyed,” said Jamila. – Photo: ©UNICEF/Syria/ Delil Souleiman
UN Communications Chief interviews UNICEF in Syria

Media www.rajawalisiber.com  – “When I meet with children, I just see that there’s always that glimpse of hope in their eyes and that drive to make a future for themselves.”

Bo Viktor Nylund has always been drawn to complex, difficult places. As the Representative of UNICEF in Syria, he is a passionate advocate for the rights of children growing up in one of the world’s most thorny and protracted crises.

Children continue to bear the brunt of Syria’s decade-old conflict, with millions of childhoods shattered through destruction, displacement, and death. Meanwhile, thousands of children of Islamic State fighters, some as young as 12, are being held indefinitely in camps in the country’s north.

In this episode, Bo Viktor Nylund reflects on their grim plight and his determination to do right by every Syrian child hoping for a better future through education.

“The situation of the children who have been affiliated with Islamic State is basically a time bomb in the making.”

Screen-shot photo credit: ©UNICEF/Syria/ Delil Souleiman

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