Turkey: future for refugees?
Following the deal struck
between the European Union and Turkey, Greece began deporting refugees and
migrants to Turkey on April 4, 2016.
The
idea was to help alleviate the pressure building on Greece, as the ‘gateway’
country to Europe. At that time, notes the UNHCR,
Syrian refugees in Turkey were at around 3.5 million.
International Needs USAPresident
and CEO Rody Rodeheaver says it remains a fluid issue. “The refugee problem is an enormous problem from the
perspective of numbers, and also from a perspective of the disintegration of
life, because of all of the hurt, the destruction, (and) the chaos that many of these
people have had to live through, and escape from.”
The
majority of refugees live in urban areas, including cities without refugee
camps, such as Istanbul, Izmir and Bursa. ”We are working in camps both in
Istanbul as well as all across the country, some of them in the East.”
Plus,
in an area close to Antioch, he says, they hit upon a new idea. First, the context: “There is a camp there that is
made up of several hundred families that have escaped from Syria. Many
children.”
Although
somewhat protected, refugees and migrants face particular challenges regarding
basic rights and livelihood support in Turkey. Unregistered refugees and
irregular migrants are not entitled to access any public services in Turkey
except emergency health services provided by public hospitals. That also means that “Children who are part of the
refugee contingent cannot go to school because they do not speak Turkish.”
Rodeheaver
says they also discovered Arabic-speaking Syrian teachers among the refugee
population. “We have hired these teachers
(who are part of the refugee community there) to teach the children.” International Needs provided a makeshift school. “We
bring in supplies and these teachers are continuing to educate the children
there.”
Thousands
of children live in this “between” world in Turkey. Faced with the reality of not being able to return home in the next few years,
“What we’re doing is saving children from living for years and years with no
education and being very susceptible to indoctrination into some of the causes
like ISIS that are radical.”
The
International Needs team in Turkey is working to bring encouragement and relief
to these refugee children and their families. A tent. A warm blanket. A jacket
for cold days. Food. Shoes for growing feet. A cuddly stuffed animal for those
lonely times when tears come. But now, says Rodeheaver, the reality is that
these millions are stranded in a new land.
“That’s
the reason I was just in Turkey: to lay long-term plans where our staff will
continue to develop relationships and next-step scenarios with people that we
know that, probably for ten years or more, are going to be locked in this
situation.”
Ministering
to refugees is a Gospel Outreach endeavor for International Needs. First, these
people are hurting and need comfort. Meeting those immediate needs builds a
relationship of trust, he says. ”The Gospel in one hand, and compassion in the
other. There is more and more of a receptivity on the part of the people in the
camp to us, as people. Relationships are being built.”
“I
can’t tell you how many times our staff has heard, ‘it has been the Christians
who have come to our aid. We are so grateful.’” That is what the Gospel is all about, explains Rodeheaver.
International
Needs’ goal is to develop the evangelical churches who exist in those areas and
“…work alongside of them to provide ongoing programs that not just handle the
tertiary kinds of needs, but also would develop the kinds of relationships with
these people that we can help with in situations, long-term.”
Please
pray for the refugee children in Turkey who can’t go home again. The Lord knows
each heart. May this be an opportunity for His comfort and hope for each young
life.
Mission News Network is a
mission news service dedicated to keeping Christians informed on evangelical
mission activity around the world; in doing so we hope to educate and motivate
Christians to prayer, participation, and support of missionary work to help
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