Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Cruel exile for Syrian Palestinians
Cruel exile for Syrian Palestinians
Jun 8, 2026 6:32 PM

  Life in overcrowded refugee camps of Lebanon is proving difficult for Palestinians fleeing Syria.

  "We are discriminated against here. The Palestinians think we take their jobs and other things. But you see, here, we have nothing.

  We don't feel welcome."

  The Palestinian refugee from Syria sits in the single small room she occupies with her family, her husband crouched beside a pile of disheveled mattresses.

  "But if Assad is still in power then we will not return [to Syria]. He will not stop shooting."

  Her husband nods and chain-smokes while their two children smile, seemingly oblivious to the family's dire circumstances.

  "I have depression," the husband said, declining to give his name out of fear for their security. "We want deeply to go back to Syria. We have no jobs, nothing here."

  The family has been living in Ein el-Helweh Palestinian refugee camp in the southern Lebanese coastal city of Saida for more than a year since fleeing Syria with nothing more than the clothes on their back.

  "We lost 11 family members, six of whom were children, in the chemical attack last month," said the woman, who will only give her initials, A.M. "They all died. My daughter was outside when [the shells] hit the building. She is pregnant but escaped. We are so tired of living here."

  There is one bed and three filthy, thin mattresses that provide no comfort. Tangled electric wires hang above their heads, but power is rare. They share one bathroom with the rest of the building, and cook on a portable gas stove next to the shared toilet.

  Their story is not uncommon and is a shocking reminder of the human impact of Syria's war.

  Overpopulated and growing

  Ein el-Helweh hosts about 47,500 registered refugees, according to Chris Gunness, spokesman for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).

  Gunness said the camp has become home to about 6,500 of the estimated 45,000 Palestinian refugees from Syria in Lebanon who are facing significant problems.

  "They are confronted with limited access to shelter and employment, limited access to local health centers, lack of income and increased cost of living," he said. "The already overpopulated Palestine refugee camps in Lebanon are now feeling the strain on their limited infrastructure."

  Yasser Dawoud, executive director of the non-profit organization Development Action Without Borders, echoed his concerns. He said the camp is served only by Palestinian NGOs and there is no UN refugee agency presence.

  "An increasing number of Syrian refugees are entering Palestinian refugee camps," he said.

  "They do not have access to schools, healthcare, and at the same time, it is very costly for them to go outside the camp. A human being is a human being. The needs are the same for a Syrian refugee and a Palestinian refugee."

  With the camp near breaking point, many have been forced to squeeze into existing collective shelters and tents. Each room hosts more than three families and is allocated one toilet, while all 60 families in a shelter share just one shower.

  About 50 meters away is a dense community of makeshift tents that barely fit three people each. Mattresses hang with string from the roof, sewage drips down the side of the only toilet - and there is an atmosphere of hopelessness.

  Such deplorable living conditions, combined with the lack of employment, are generating tensions between different communities in Ein el-Helweh.

  Psychologist Rewida Ismail, who works with particularly vulnerable refugees in the camp, said host communities were also feeling the pinch.

  "These people from Syria are coming to a new environment, they are unable to adapt. They have no privacy and they can't be independent," she said.

  "Being hosted by other families is making it worse, because these families are already facing stress and pressure."

  However, Gunness insists there is no evidence of tension between different groups.

  "Some Palestinian refugees from Syria could find jobs with lower wages than Palestinian refugees," he said. "However, no signs of tension can be noticed between the two communities."

  Yet some Palestinian refugees from Syria are not convinced.

  "There is so much discrimination against us," said a mother of two, who would not give her name for security reasons.

  "In the beginning everyone would come and support us. The Palestinians thought we took all the support away from them. All the people started to feel that they didn't like us.

  "They think we're taking all their jobs because we might do a job cheaper. Our children are not even integrated with other parts of the community for school."

  Gunness points out that UNRWA provides "dedicated" classes for the children of Palestinians from Syria to give them more support.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A Syrian refugee camp

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
A new life in Aleppo amid snipers, missiles and explosives
  One of the most memorable objects from the Bosnian war two decades ago was the sign that said "Pazi Snajper" (Watch out, sniper). Hundreds of Bosnians were killed by snipers up in hidden posts around Sarajevo.   Dozens of people collapsed in streets, shot dead silently. It was the "sniper death,"...
Maliki's Iraq: Rape, executions and torture
  Heba al-Shamary (name changed for security reasons) was released recently from an Iraqi prison where she spent the last four years.   "I was tortured and raped repeatedly by the Iraqi security forces," she told Al Jazeera. "I want to tell the world what I and other Iraqi women in prison...
The return to Iqrit
  A dream long nurtured by hundreds of thousands of Palestinians made refugees during the establishment of the state of Israel has become a concrete reality at a small makeshift camp atop a windswept hill.   A dozen young men have set up the camp at a site in the Upper Galilee...
690 Egyptians detained, claims rights group
  The Egyptian Defense Center of Human Rights has stated that 690 people were detained after the incident when fire was opened on civilians outside the Republican Guard HQ in Cairo last Monday morning and that there were children, women and elders among the detainees who were holding a pro-Morsi sit-in....
Egypt's revolution: Dead or alive?
  As crowds dominate political discourse in Egypt - on one end, those who support the military, and on the other, backers of deposed president Mohamed Morsi - a middle ground is mourning the loss of a dream.   "My hope was that we don't live in injustice anymore, because we were...
Jordan to host 'world's largest refugee camp'
  Al-Zaatari refugee camp near Jordan's northern border with Syria is the second largest refugee camp in the world. On days when violence in Syria worsens, between 2,000-4,000 Syrians flood into Zaatari, and the stories they tell are horrific.   "Things are happening in Syria that our minds couldn't even imagine," 65-year-old...
Kurds flee for Iraq as Syria war slogs on
  As Syria's brutal war slogs on, some of the country's ethnic Kurds have been fleeing the chaos and destruction and taking refuge across the border in Iraq.   About 50,000 people live in the Domiz camp, located near the city of Duhok about 60 kilometers from the Syria-Iraq border. The camp's...
Asad's thugs massacres of Sunni families and children
  The pictures appear to tell a familiar story. In one a pile of bodies lies on a street corner, shot down, apparently where they were gathered. Among them is a girl in a red blouse, perhaps five years old, spread-eagled among a dozen other family members, some covered in sheets....
Amnesty accuses Israel of judicial bullying
  Two female Palestinian activists have gone on trial in an Israeli military court over their involvement in weekly demonstrations against an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank.   Rights groups and activists said on Tuesday that the prosecution of Nariman Tamimi and Rana Hamadeh coincided with a rise in Israeli...
Egyptians' missing Ramadan spirit
  While the notions of peace and cooperation are celebrated in the Muslim world at this time of year, Egyptians are struggling with those concepts during the holy month of Ramadan after the divisive military overthrow of the elected government.   Egypt's Muslim population, which makes up the majority of its 84...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved