A Syrian refugee once said, “I grabbed the pen to write my misery, but the pen cried before my eyes did.”
Hearkening a child, I repeat, a child, express such an eloquent, figurative statement should disturb the comforted and silence the disturbed. Child trauma has vigorously taken over Syrian refugees, for children have become victims of today’s catastrophe and hopefully, warriors of tomorrow’s history. Child trauma within Syrian refugee camps is a strenuous, momentous issue in obligation of being resolved. More than half of the refugees being affected and abused are children. They have been forced to quit school and trained to carry a weapon instead of a toy or a book. The only games their minds have adapted to are violent war games. They are unable of holding a pen and paper without the urge of expressing concealed emotions through obscure drawings and dejecting quotes. They have witnessed their own parents utter their last words in front of them. Their childhood life is similar to an unhealed wound which continues to bleed. The invisible scars of …show more content…
An appropriate solution that can be done to try and heal at least a small percentage of the children experiencing excessive, unnecessary agony would be for charity associations to build nearby schools and centers that include a dorm like atmosphere for children to temporarily live in instead of suffer outdoors inside tents and remain uneducated. In that way, people won’t be able to subject them to any sort of alarming tasks, and children would be able to try and recreate their childhoods and replenish their minds with optimism. After all, children deserve to acquire a miraculous, memorable childhood, not a burdened, explosive