UNICEF launches interactive glimpse into Syrian children’s struggle for education

[Class photo 2 of 4] Seven of the 20 Syrian refugees who do attend school stand for a photograph in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon, Friday, 20 May, 2016. The other 13 are being deprived of a basic right, missing an opportunity of a better life and of breaking a cycle of injustice. #ImagineaSchool - In December 2016, some 13.5 million Syrians have been forced to flee their homes and are either internally displaced or have become refugees. Currently, 1 million Syrian refugees are registered in Lebanon, of which half are children. Unregistered refugees are estimated to number around half a million. Before the crisis, Syria had some of the highest literacy and school attendance rates in the Middle East and North Africa. Nearly six years into the violence, half of all Syrian children - or 2.8 million - in Syria and neighbouring countries, are currently out of school. Protracted crises like the one in Syria not only temporarily interrupt children’s education and lives, but they often also close the door on education for a lifetime. Syrians parents are fully aware of the importance of education, but with seven in 10 registered Syrian refugees in Lebanon living below the poverty line, their socioeconomic situation is often so serious that they are left with no choice other than making their children work. Employing children is illegal in Lebanon and failing to meet children’s basic right of education quashes their hope of a normal childhood and impedes them in contributing to future societies. Currently, 183,000 school aged children from Syria are out of school - 49% of all registered Syrian refugee children in Lebanon. The Bekaa valley in eastern Lebanon has the highest concentration of Syrian refugees in the country. The valley is also an agricultural area and land owners in Lebanon often allow Syrians to live on their land in exchange for labour by the family’s children. The typical child labourer in Lebanon is a Syrian boy between 10 and 14 years of age - boys fr

BEIRUT, 23 January 2017 – A new interactive documentary providing an intimate look into the lives of Syrian school-aged children living as refugees in Lebanon was launched by UNICEF today. #ImagineaSchool provides a first-hand account of the challenges Syrian refugees face in their struggle to access education.

UNICEF released the stories of 19 children to coincide with the start of the Helsinki forum on the humanitarian situation in Syria (23 – 24 January), with the aim of bringing a human face to the challenges being discussed at the conference.

Around half of Syrian school-aged children in Lebanon – 187,000 – are out of school. The country hosts the largest number of refugees per capita in the world. Instead of getting an education, thousands of Syrian children, some as young as six years old, are working in agriculture, factories, construction and on the streets.

UNICEF and the Government of Lebanon have provided more than 150,000 Syrian refugee children with access to public schools. To get more children into quality learning, UNICEF is appealing for US$240 million for education programmes in Lebanon for 2017.

“Poverty, social exclusion, insecurity and language barriers are preventing Syrian children from getting an education, leaving an entire generation disadvantaged, impoverished and at risk of being pushed into early marriage and child labour,” said UNICEF Lebanon Representative Tanya Chapuisat.

“Working with the government, donors and partners, we have managed to get nearly half of Syrian refugee children living in Lebanon into learning. Now it‘s time to reach the other half so that every child gets a chance to get a quality education,” said Chapuisat.

The interactive documentary, which was filmed in 2016, was co-produced by UNICEF and an award-winning team of storytellers from Vignette Interactive. Photos were captured by World Press Photo winner, Alessio Romenzi.

“Listening to children’s stories and realizing the role that education plays in dealing with their plight, was heart-breaking. In the photos, I worked to capture how much going to school means to them – hoping that my work could help them make a simple dream come true,” Romenzi explains.

The title, #ImagineaSchool, was created by 10-year-old Assia, and 13-year-old Dyana, who feature in the series, both of whom have never been to school. “I imagine a school to be very beautiful. With paintings of girls and boys on the walls,” said Dyana.

Globally, education continues to be one of the least funded sectors in humanitarian appeals. In 2015, humanitarian agencies received only 31 per cent of their education funding needs, down from 66 per cent a decade ago.

During the World Humanitarian Summit, held in May 2016, a new global funding platform, Education Cannot Wait, was launched to bridge the gap between humanitarian interventions during crises and long-term development afterwards, through predictable funding.

Image © UNICEF/UN043206/Romenzi
Seven of 20 Syrian refugees who attend school stand for a photograph in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon, 20 May 2016. The other 13 are being deprived of a basic right, missing the chance for a better life and of breaking a cycle of injustice.

To watch the interactive series, visit: www.imagineaschool.com
For more information about UNICEF and its work for children, please click here.

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