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'Bittersweet' Mother’s Day for Syrians

Syrian mothers in Turkey want the war to end and return to their country during “Mother’s Day”.

10.05.2014 - Update : 10.05.2014
'Bittersweet' Mother’s Day for Syrians


ISTANBUL/ SANLIURFA 

Mother's Day is a special celebration of women who raise children, but for Syrian refugee mothers in Turkey, it’s a bittersweet time because of the on-going civil war in their country.

Women and children are the ones mostly affected by the Syrian civil war. Many Syrian mothers have lost their homes, friends, relatives and even their children during the three-year conflict.

But despite strong grief, women have never lost their hope in life and forgotten their maternity for the sake of their children. Syrian mothers look forward to the day they return to their homes after the end of the war.

Syrian refugee Dilap Mukri told Anadolu Agency that she came to Turkey with her husband and 10 children after their home was destroyed by an air attack and that her son passed away during a clash. She lives in Turkey’s refugee camp in the southeastern Akcakale district of Sanliurfa province.

Mukri’s relatives are still in Syria saying, “I miss my mom everyday, but there are certain days -- like eid, sacrifice feast and Mother's Day -- when her absence is felt more strongly”. 

Fatma Ganip is another of Turkey’s refugee camp resident who lost his 23-year-old son in the civil war. “For us, Mother's Day is no different from the other days and we were torn out by the civil war” she said.

Turkey’s other cities also host many Syrian refugee families, who do not live in the camps.

Syrian mother Feride Harbutli and her six children arrived at the dilapidated basement building where they are staying in Istanbul for one and half year. “We had work, we had a big home,” she said.

“Two weeks ago my daughter's husband died in the war and I cannot feel good about Mother's Day because my older daughter is still in Syria,” Harbutli said over Mothers’ Day.   

In March, as the civil war in Syria entered its fourth year, 76 percent of the current 2.3 million Syrian refugees fleeing "a horrific and tragic situation" in the country are women and children, according to UN Refugee Agency.

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