Monday, July 1, 2013

Visit to Zaatari Syrian Refugee Camp



It’s been a very hectic and emotional couple of days for the team here in Jordan. Some of us visited a Syrian refugee camp on the border and that led right into the first day of surgery. That means 12 to 14 hour days, leaving little time for updating all of you on our progress. So now I’m back and I would like to provide you all with the updates of the last several days.




June 29:
Zaatari Syrian Refugee Camp

After much red tape and months of back and forth, we finally got approval and drove about an hour north towards the Jordanian-Syrian border to visit the Zaatari refugee camp for Syrians coming into Jordan.  All Syrians who are fleeing the Syrian civil war and going to Jordan go through the camp. The camp is 12 kilometers from the border, and estimates range from about 500-1000 refugees a day entering Zaatari.  It is very close to the war.  Although there are a lot of registered people, today realistically, there are around 120,000 refugees there.  When we arrived, we were escorted in and met with the Senior Field Coordinator, Kilian Kleinschmidt.  He and his staff gave our Operation Smile team a detailed briefing on the camp and it’s evolution.  Next we got to our primary objective of the trip with an extended discussion on health care. At that point Kathy Magee, the co-founder of Operation Smile took the lead and discussed ways that OS could work with the camp to assist them with their massive and overwhelming health care needs. 





Post briefing, members of the UNHCF took us through the camp.  I will try to briefly describe what that experience was like, but honestly for me I’m not sure how to express my thoughts eloquently enough to vividly portray the impact of seeing firsthand how life in the camp was unfolding but I’ll try.  

First we were taken to a trailer where we met up with the families who came to the screening day.  It was so wonderful to see all of the beautiful faces of the children we had just seen the day before.  My boy Mohammed was there with his parents looking as sweet as ever.  We also saw baby Mais, a severely malnourished 6 month old baby girl with a cleft (she is only 5 pounds).  Thank God she was brought to screening day so that she was identified, and now can be properly fed with the necessary bottles and formula.  Had she not arrived that day, I honestly believe that baby would not have survived.

Kathy Magee discussing feeding techniques
Baby Mais

Burn victim from war

More burns



Moroccan Military Doctors



We left the secure compound of the UNHCF and toured the Moroccan field hospital. It’s completely staffed and run by the Moroccan military providing everything from basic care to emergency services. We met with the doctors and discussed how we could collaborate. I think we made some great headway.




As for the camp itself, I expected a field of tents, simple, rudimentary items and people in need of basic everyday items. However, the camp was very different from what I envisioned. It is a city that sprung from the desert with all the good and bad a typical city possesses, along with some unique problems and challenges. I will follow up in more detail in the coming days but for now I will let our photos tell the story.



Rows of "stores" have popped up

Portable units in parts of the camp 


Syrians innovate using any materials they can obtain

UNHCR provided tents
Water distribution is via large water towers
Some of the children from the camp

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