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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, June 4, 2017
How Trump Backlash Is Funding a Refugee Camp School in Lebanon
The
financial challenges are daunting – but Donald Trump has unwittingly
spurred a wave of donations that will help educate thousands of
children.
BAR ELIAS, Lebanon — The dirt paths in the encampments turn into rivers
of mud when it rains. Cold leaks through the canvas tents in the winter;
some refugees have frozen to death during particularly vicious storms.
But now it’s spring, and the fields outside the town of Bar Elias are
green with budding wheat and potatoes. Inside the blue-and-white tents
dotting these fields, however, the struggles to build a life remain as
daunting as ever.
There are no well-ordered, state-run refugee camps in Lebanon;
everything is haphazard. The tent encampments are built on private land,
placing the refugees at the mercy of landlords, and scattered at random
across the eastern Bekaa Valley, making it difficult for humanitarian
organizations to coordinate support. Many of the 1.5 million Syrian
refugees in the country live in conditions like this. It is as if an
entire nation deposited itself in an area where one would expect to find
nothing but agricultural land or the odd farmer tending his sheep.
A cluster of buildings, the largest of which is perhaps the size of a
small barn, sits on the edge of the tent camp surrounded by a chain-link
fence. This is the Kayany Foundation’s Telyani School, where children 6
to 13 attend classes in subjects such as English, Arabic, and math. The
outer walls are adorned with cardboard cutouts of pink, red, and blue
flowers. “Welcome Spring” reads a rainbow-colored sign. Children line up
excitedly each morning outside the classrooms, a cheery contrast with
the drab life outside the school.
Here, I am rarely introduced as a reporter or the Middle East editor of Foreign Policy. Rather, I am ibn Carol: the son of Carol. My mother is the head of the American nonprofit that raises money for the Kayany schools.
So while I make no pretense of objectivity when discussing Kayany, I can
provide you with a few facts about the schools. I can tell you there
are seven of them, including two all-girls schools, enrolling more than
3,400 students. I can tell you that a large portion of teachers are
Syrian refugees, and that the schools serve 77,000 free meals per month.
I can tell you that many of the children who attend these schools would probably receive no education at all if it weren’t for Kayany, and that every time I have visited, clusters of children linger outside the chain-link fence around the schools, hoping to be allowed in.
I
can tell you that many of the children who attend these schools would
probably receive no education at all if it weren’t for Kayany, and that
every time I have visited, clusters of children linger outside the
chain-link fence around the schools, hoping to be allowed in.
Kayany operates on a mix of partnerships with larger organizations and
private donations. For example, it received financial support from the
Malala Fund to open the all-girls schools, and has partnered with
organizations like the Jesuit Refugee Service to operate them. After
salaries are paid, textbooks are bought, and meals are prepared, it
costs Kayany $1.7 million per year to fund its operations. The
organization relies heavily on private donations — and until recently,
raising that money was no easy feat. (It’s not just Kayany. The U.N.
humanitarian response plan, which is meant to provide support for
Syrians who haven’t left the country, suffers from a funding gap of $2.9
billion in 2017 alone.)
But in January, the efforts of American nonprofits to raise money in
support of Syrian refugees received a boost from the unlikeliest of
sources: Donald Trump. The newly inaugurated U.S. president had just
issued the first travel ban, which would have suspended the entry of
Syrian refugees indefinitely, sparking a wave of “rage donations” by
Americans incensed by the executive order. Jennifer Patterson, the
deputy executive director at USA for UNHCR, which raises money for the
U.N. Refugee Agency and other partners, said that the weekend after the
travel ban, her organization experienced a 370 percent surge in traffic
on its website and the second-largest fundraising weekend in its
history.
Kayany, too, has since seen a wave of donations. Money poured in from
organizations of Arab-American college students; art dealers in New York
were suddenly eager to help organize charity auctions in support of the
schools. “People were just aghast. It just hit a raw nerve,” said
Jumana Elzayn, a Syrian-American living in California who has donated to
Kayany. “This is not what our country is about.”
But in the Syrian refugee camps of Lebanon, there is still not
enough — not enough schools, not enough psychosocial support, not enough
money. Some students start drifting away from school before they reach
their teenage years, because their parents need them to work. Amina Al
Zein, the administrator of the Telyani school and a refugee herself,
said there are roughly 100 children in the school’s first grade, but
only 13 in the sixth grade. The rest, she says, have gone to work.
Eleven-year-old Aya worked in the potato fields last summer, rising at 4
a.m. to begin her shift and then heading to school at noon. She’s a
slight, precocious girl who regularly drowns out her classmates in her
determination to be heard. Her favorite classes are Arabic and English,
she says, because she “wants to understand everything.”
Only the most menial employment is available, and preteens work in
factories or the fields for as little as $10 a week. Her mother
eventually stopped her from working because Aya was experiencing
backaches. She might return this summer; her father is dead, and her
family needs the money.
But it will be only during the summer, Aya insists, not when Kayany
opens its doors. She juts out her chin and smiles proudly. “I don’t let
anything stand in the way of coming to school.”
This article originally appeared in the May/June 2017 issue of FP magazine.
Photo credit: Courtesy of the Kayany Foundation