Refugee Stories

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. Everyone has the right to recognition everywhere as a person before the law.

New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, 2016 

A Call to Address Youth Isolation During the COVID-19 Crisis

From the Coalition for Belonging:

feet of soccer player tread on soccer ball for kick-off in the stadium

The sport-based youth development (SBYD) community emphasizes the need to support community building and preservation of connections between coach-mentors and youth during the pandemic.

Over one billion young people are currently experiencing a disruption in their ability to go to school and participate in extracurricular activities. This crisis will not only interrupt classroom learning, but will also create a sense of isolation that will spread more widely and quickly than the pandemic itself.

read more…

Seeking Asylum in Greece: Women and Unaccompanied Children Struggle to Survive

Single Afghan mother with her young son in Moria, Lesvos.

At the height of recent irregular migration to Europe in 2015, Greece was a transit country and gateway into the European Union (EU). Most asylum seekers and migrants moved onward from the Greek Aegean islands to other parts of Europe. With increases in the flow of asylum seekers from Turkey to Greece and the closure of other European borders, however, Greece has transformed from a short stopover for asylum seekers to a host country for large numbers of refugees.

Read the full story: Refugees International

Meet Syrians caught in one of the biggest upheavals in nine years of war

A Syrian woman uses olive branches as firewood to cook in a makeshift camp on the outskirts of Qah, a village in northern Idlib .

Home to four million civilians, northwest Syria is in the midst of a humanitarian catastrophe. Intense fighting in Idlib has forced 950,000 people to flee since December 1. More than 50 percent have been women and children. Many of these families had fled the area previously during earlier waves of violence.

Read the full story:  International Rescue Committee

Tent

In the refugee camp in Larissa, Greece, tents double as climbing frames: Doctors of the World UK

Jennifer Ballengee

There are currently 65.3 million forcibly displaced people in the world—the highest number ever on record.  Over 20 million of these people are recognized by the United Nations as refugees of war. Millions of these people live in tents—fields of tents, small cities of tents, in official refugee camps run by UNHCR, government organizations, or non-profits, or in “unofficial” groups of tents by the side of the road, just outside of a port, gathered under a highway bridge, in an airport, on an abandoned Olympic soccer field.

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‘I’m A Survivor Of Violence’: Portraits Of Women Waiting In Mexico For U.S. Asylum

“Hitting a woman for a man is as normal as eating a tortilla from a food stand on the way to work,” said Karen Paz, 34, from San Pedro Sula in Honduras, revealing a scar from a burn on her left shoulder. “He wanted to burn my face, but my daughter started screaming when she saw him taking the pan with boiling butter. She pushed him, and so he aimed for the arm instead.”

‘The Jungle’ Tells The Stories Inside A Real Refugee Camp In Northern France

Ahmad and Ghobsheh herald from predominantly Muslim countries whose residents are barred from coming to the U.S. under President Trump’s travel ban. Ahmad is from Syria, Ghobsheh from Iran. Both are members of The Jungle cast, a play that received near universal critical acclaim when it debuted at the Young Vic theater in London.


Home and the Human is supported 
by the Martha A. Mitten Endowment in the College of Liberal Arts at Towson University