When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, Hamida, Um Abdo and Wa鈥檃d* turned their sewing skills to mask-making.
Um Abdo at her sewing machine.
Photo: AHammam/探花精选
Employed by the 探花精选 (探花精选) through our Cash for Work program, these mothers are earning an income while protecting their community in northwest Syria from the coronavirus.
Um Abdo, 38, used to make clothes before the pandemic. Now she's creating face masks the 探花精选 gives out for free along with vital information about how people can keep themselves safe from COVID-19.
Syria鈥檚 economy has been ravaged by almost a decade of war, so the extra cash earned producing the masks has been a lifeline to support families like Um Abdo鈥檚 through the winter.
Earning vital income
鈥淚鈥檓 now able to buy supplies for my home and wood for winter,鈥 says Um Abdo, who is a mother to four children and supports her husband, who is paralyzed as the result of an injury. 鈥淭he economic situation is hard. We have to buy water and we try to ration it as it鈥檚 so expensive to live here. Many people have had to pull their children out of school and send them to work to help their families secure an income.鈥
Um Abdo with one of her sons. She used to sew clothes before the pandemic, now she's turned her skills to creating face masks the 探花精选 gives out to the community.
Photo: AHamman/探花精选
鈥淚t helped a lot,鈥 28-year-old Hamida says of the money she has earned making masks. 鈥淲e have children that need to grow, and nowadays the prices for food are so high.鈥 The cost of rent has tripled, she says, even as her family's food budget is stretched increasingly thin.
鈥淭he food we buy now is completely different to what we could afford 10 years ago,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e getting chicken stock cubes instead of real chicken.鈥
鈥淐oronavirus is hard but the conflict has been harder on us,鈥 says Um Abdo. Syria鈥檚 economy has been ravaged by almost a decade of war.
Photo: AHammam/探花精选
Battling a pandemic in a war zone
鈥淭he war has left many people who are able to work without job opportunities,鈥 says Tareq, an 探花精选 staff member who helps Syrians in the northwestern province of Idlib gain temporary employment. He says educating people about COVID-19 prevention has also become an important part of his role.
"We continuously explain the virus to people,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are fears about the virus spreading. It happened in other countries鈥攊magine how it will be for a country that has experienced war for almost 10 years. The health system barely covers the basic needs of our population.鈥
Wa'ad's main fear is not of the coronavirus but of the conflict. She has endured almost ten years of war.
Photo: AHammam/探花精选
Despite the dangers the coronavirus poses, for many Syrians, their biggest struggle is living through years of conflict.
Coronavirus is hard but conflict is harder
鈥淭he conditions we are living in concern us more than the coronavirus鈥攊t鈥檚 a pandemic that will eventually end,鈥 says Wa鈥檃d, 40, who has been displaced ten times due to the conflict and now lives in Idlib.
Wa'ad at work measuring fabric for masks.
Photo: AHammam/探花精选
鈥淲e鈥檝e experienced shelling, displacement and poverty. We鈥檝e left our sons, our homes, our land and our livelihoods and we鈥檝e come here.鈥
鈥淲e never thought that we would be living this life,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y biggest fear is that we鈥檒l have to stay here for the rest of our lives and not be able to return home.鈥
Um Abdo agrees: 鈥淐oronavirus is hard but the conflict has been harder on us."
We鈥檝e experienced shelling, displacement and poverty ... we never thought that we would be living this life.
Hamida says her greatest fear is having to uproot her life yet again. She describes the terrifying moment when her family had to flee their apartment in Aleppo in 2015: 鈥淥ur building was hit by airstrikes and split in half鈥攖he other half fell to the ground and everyone died.鈥
Wa'ad has been displaced ten times due to the conflict and now lives in Idlib.
Photo: AHammam/探花精选
鈥淲e faced many obstacles on the way here, including coming face-to-face with members of ISIS,鈥 Hamida adds. 鈥淭hank God my husband and all my four sons are here with me.鈥
Keeping hope alive
Ultimately, Hamida, Wa鈥檃d and Um Abdo all share the same hope鈥攖hat their children will not have to endure any more years living in war. Says Hamida, 鈥淚 wish the children to have a better future than ours.鈥
Five-year-old Murad is learning how to stay safe from COVID-19 thanks to his mother, Hamida, who is sewing masks for those in need.
Photo: AHammam/探花精选
Along with money to help meet basic needs, the opportunity to work has provided the three women with a little more stability as they look forward to better days ahead.
I am proud that I work hard to help my family. I hope鈥攁nd dream鈥攖hat one day we鈥檒l be able to return home.
鈥淟ife is full of ups and downs,鈥 Um Abdo says. 鈥淚 am proud that I work hard to help my family. I hope鈥攁nd dream鈥攖hat one day we鈥檒l be able to return home.鈥
*All names in this story have been changed for safety reasons.
The 探花精选 in Syria
The year 2021 marks a decade of conflict in Syria, as violence, displacement and humanitarian needs continue to grow. Syria is also the deadliest country in the world for humanitarians. Attacks on aid workers, civilians, homes and hospitals remain common. Many families have been uprooted multiple times. The health system has been decimated, undermining Syrians鈥 ability to cope with the challenges of COVID-19.
Learn more about the 探花精选's work in Syria.
Learn why Syria ranks in the top 5 of our 2021 Emergency Watchlist.