DEMORALIZED, SYRIAN REFUGEES RETURN HOME
17.11.2014
Many Christians, Armenians and Kurds who fled northeastern Syria in
recent years have been returning, choosing home over discrimination,
low-paying menial jobs and poor living conditions abroad. Sophie
Cousins reports.
Twenty-five-year-old Harrod Joseph just returned from patrolling a
Christian neighborhood in the northeastern Syrian city of Qamishli,
right near the Turkish border.
He joined the Syriac Christian security force, Sutoro, which works
to secure the inner city of the three Kurdish-dominated cantons in
northern Syria, half a year ago after he returned from eight months
in Armenia and eight months in Lebanon.
"I was so worried about the situation and I wanted to continue my
education so I went to Armenia," he told DW.
But Armenia didn't live up to Harrod's expectations. He'd planned
to send money back to his family in Syria but instead had to borrow
money from them because he couldn't find a job.
Eventually he got a job washing dishes at a cafe, but the wages were
so dismal he could barely afford to survive in a cramped, two-bedroom
apartment that he shared with seven other Syrians.
"We as Syrians got really low wages and only jobs that didn't require
any skill or education. There wasn't much of a warm welcome. I felt
like a stranger. Of course they were Armenian, but I'm a Syrian
Armenian and that made a big difference," he said.
Realizing there were no education or employment opportunities on the
horizon, he travelled to Lebanon aiming to cross from there into Syria
but became stuck for eight months because the border and route home
wasn't safe.
Harrod made it back to Qamishli, but after 16 months abroad, the city
was almost unrecognizable.
"In the early days of the revolution, there were no checkpoints and
no political parties on the streets," he said. "When I came back the
city was completely different and new - even the people had changed. So
many people had left and so many refugees had arrived."
Harrod said he was happy to be supporting his family but hoped to be
able to continue his education in Europe one day.
"If I leave again, I wouldn't leave by myself, I would take my family.
I don't want the same story to repeat itself."
'Fighting together'
Many people DW talked to across northeastern Syria were critical of
those who choose to leave for Europe. Kurds in particular stressed
that it was their duty to protect their land, identity and people
from the onslaught of the "Islamic State."
A senior member of Sutoro, Aboud, who didn't want to use his surname,
shared similar sentiments.
Many Kurds in northeastern Syria are devoted to fighting IS
"We want to stop the migration of Assyrians to Europe," he told DW.
"We want to encourage everyone to come home and fight.
"Ethnicity and religion shouldn't matter. We're fighting this war
together," Aboud said.
George, a man with a thick grey moustache and round belly, his wife
Jacqueline and their four children left Derike, a small but largely
deserted city in the Hasaka province, one year into the Syrian crisis.
While they were grateful the city had been spared the war's most
gruesome features, the family struggled to cope with no work, rising
food prices, a lack of electricity and water and the general feeling
of instability.
They fled to the Netherlands in the hopes of better job prospects.
There George worked as a farmer, harvesting cucumbers, and tried his
best to pick up the language.
But the family struggled to live comfortably off George's low pay
and in living conditions - they shared a one-room apartment - that
were a stark contrast to their modest family home back in Syria.
They also faced discrimination.
"I realized that I was only regarded and treated as a human being
where I come from," George told DW, adding that he endured verbal
abuse for being Syrian. "I am Christian. Doesn't that mean I have
rights in Holland, too?"
After two years, the family moved back to Syria.
'Death is everywhere'
Sixty-eight-year-old Armenian priest Dajad Hagopian wears his clerical
clothing every day even though he only gives a sermon once a week to
a handful of people at the Armenian Orthodox Church in Derike. There
used to be 450 Armenians here but now only 200 remain.
Even war couldn't keep Dajad away from home
Dajad left Syria before the war broke out because he was despondent
about the plight of Armenians. He spent four years in Germany before
returning: He missed his homeland.
"People ask what Germany was like and I tell them my house had four
walls like theirs," he said, adding that he's not in the position to
tell people not to leave when three of his own children recently took
off for Europe.
"God said give us our daily bread, and we get it. We may not get as
much, but we have fruit, meat and bread, and that's all we need,"
he said.
"People think that death is just in Syria, but it's everywhere."
http://www.dw.de/demoralized-syrian-refugees-return-home/a-18069604
17.11.2014
Many Christians, Armenians and Kurds who fled northeastern Syria in
recent years have been returning, choosing home over discrimination,
low-paying menial jobs and poor living conditions abroad. Sophie
Cousins reports.
Twenty-five-year-old Harrod Joseph just returned from patrolling a
Christian neighborhood in the northeastern Syrian city of Qamishli,
right near the Turkish border.
He joined the Syriac Christian security force, Sutoro, which works
to secure the inner city of the three Kurdish-dominated cantons in
northern Syria, half a year ago after he returned from eight months
in Armenia and eight months in Lebanon.
"I was so worried about the situation and I wanted to continue my
education so I went to Armenia," he told DW.
But Armenia didn't live up to Harrod's expectations. He'd planned
to send money back to his family in Syria but instead had to borrow
money from them because he couldn't find a job.
Eventually he got a job washing dishes at a cafe, but the wages were
so dismal he could barely afford to survive in a cramped, two-bedroom
apartment that he shared with seven other Syrians.
"We as Syrians got really low wages and only jobs that didn't require
any skill or education. There wasn't much of a warm welcome. I felt
like a stranger. Of course they were Armenian, but I'm a Syrian
Armenian and that made a big difference," he said.
Realizing there were no education or employment opportunities on the
horizon, he travelled to Lebanon aiming to cross from there into Syria
but became stuck for eight months because the border and route home
wasn't safe.
Harrod made it back to Qamishli, but after 16 months abroad, the city
was almost unrecognizable.
"In the early days of the revolution, there were no checkpoints and
no political parties on the streets," he said. "When I came back the
city was completely different and new - even the people had changed. So
many people had left and so many refugees had arrived."
Harrod said he was happy to be supporting his family but hoped to be
able to continue his education in Europe one day.
"If I leave again, I wouldn't leave by myself, I would take my family.
I don't want the same story to repeat itself."
'Fighting together'
Many people DW talked to across northeastern Syria were critical of
those who choose to leave for Europe. Kurds in particular stressed
that it was their duty to protect their land, identity and people
from the onslaught of the "Islamic State."
A senior member of Sutoro, Aboud, who didn't want to use his surname,
shared similar sentiments.
Many Kurds in northeastern Syria are devoted to fighting IS
"We want to stop the migration of Assyrians to Europe," he told DW.
"We want to encourage everyone to come home and fight.
"Ethnicity and religion shouldn't matter. We're fighting this war
together," Aboud said.
George, a man with a thick grey moustache and round belly, his wife
Jacqueline and their four children left Derike, a small but largely
deserted city in the Hasaka province, one year into the Syrian crisis.
While they were grateful the city had been spared the war's most
gruesome features, the family struggled to cope with no work, rising
food prices, a lack of electricity and water and the general feeling
of instability.
They fled to the Netherlands in the hopes of better job prospects.
There George worked as a farmer, harvesting cucumbers, and tried his
best to pick up the language.
But the family struggled to live comfortably off George's low pay
and in living conditions - they shared a one-room apartment - that
were a stark contrast to their modest family home back in Syria.
They also faced discrimination.
"I realized that I was only regarded and treated as a human being
where I come from," George told DW, adding that he endured verbal
abuse for being Syrian. "I am Christian. Doesn't that mean I have
rights in Holland, too?"
After two years, the family moved back to Syria.
'Death is everywhere'
Sixty-eight-year-old Armenian priest Dajad Hagopian wears his clerical
clothing every day even though he only gives a sermon once a week to
a handful of people at the Armenian Orthodox Church in Derike. There
used to be 450 Armenians here but now only 200 remain.
Even war couldn't keep Dajad away from home
Dajad left Syria before the war broke out because he was despondent
about the plight of Armenians. He spent four years in Germany before
returning: He missed his homeland.
"People ask what Germany was like and I tell them my house had four
walls like theirs," he said, adding that he's not in the position to
tell people not to leave when three of his own children recently took
off for Europe.
"God said give us our daily bread, and we get it. We may not get as
much, but we have fruit, meat and bread, and that's all we need,"
he said.
"People think that death is just in Syria, but it's everywhere."
http://www.dw.de/demoralized-syrian-refugees-return-home/a-18069604