A tale of two crises

Ten years on:

A tale of two crises

Ten years of fighting. Ten years away from home. Ten years with the constant threat of danger and death. But also, in spite of the heartbreak, ten years of God’s incredible love. This is the Syrian civil war, ten years on.

It may have largely disappeared from our news feeds, but the Syrian civil war and subsequent refugee crisis are still raging on – and in many ways, are worse than ever. According to the Lebanese Society for Education and Social Development (LSESD), BMS World Mission’s partner in Lebanon, the number of Syrian families in Lebanon now living in poverty has increased from 55 per cent to 90 per cent over the last year. But even in the midst of these devastating crises, our partner has seen God at work.

It's estimated that one in four people in Lebanon is a Syrian refugee.

Crises within crises

BMS World Mission has been supporting Syrian refugees in Lebanon since 2011, when we first provided vital food and hygiene kits to families in desperate need. Over the last decade, we’ve continued offering crucial food support, and have also helped get Syrian children back in education at BMS-supported learning centres. But since the Syrian crisis began in 2010, the situations in both Syria and Lebanon have grown more and more desperate with each passing year. Today, around one in four people in Lebanon is a Syrian refugee. And Lebanon itself has faced a financial crisis, the Covid-19 pandemic and the tragic Beirut blasts, all over just a couple of years.

Our partner tells us that these challenges mean that both Syrian and Lebanese families are struggling more than ever to find work so they can afford basic necessities like food and rent. Rabih*, a Syrian man, told our partner that, “I believe that the refugee crisis has worsened the economic crisis… If I make any money, I feel that a Lebanese person is more deserving of it.”
In the midst of such tragedies and despair, it’s hard to see how this situation could come to any kind of positive conclusion. But that’s where you come in.

A father stands in the centre surrounded by his two young sons and daughter in a camp supported by BMS partners LSESD.
"If I make any money, I feel that a Lebanese person is more deserving of it.,” said Rahib, a Syrian man supported by LSESD.

Your faithful generosity

Throughout these crises and tragedies, BMS supporters have responded with incredible compassion and generosity. You might remember our Syria’s Forgotten Families harvest appeal back in 2016, which raised an incredible £435,479.90 – the biggest response to any of our harvest appeals to date.

Because you refused to forget Syria, you’ve made a real difference to people like Nour*. Nour and her family regularly struggled to get enough food on the table, and in the tough economic climate, her husband often can’t find work. But thanks to your generosity, her seven-year-old daughter Samia* was able to start school at a BMS-supported learning centre back in 2019. Even though the Coronavirus pandemic struck a few months into her schooling, Samia was still able to keep learning with lessons sent over WhatsApp. “I thought they would not care about our family much,” said Nour. “I was surprised when […] the teachers actually called to help with the lessons.”

Not only is the centre providing Samia with the education she deserves, it’s also a lifeline for Nour herself. She receives food parcels from the centre every week, and it’s also become a place she can go to unburden herself of her worries.

“I eagerly waited for one of the staff to call me because I can cry and laugh and vent to someone,” said Nour. “My husband is burdened already, I cannot add to his sorrow, so whenever the teachers called, I felt relieved.”

Nour’s is just one story from among many who have received vital help from the centre. And without your support, that just wouldn’t have been possible.

*Names changed

Thanks to your support, we were able to get food parcels to struggling Syrian families.

Another decade of despair?

  • Despite the light of God clearly shining in the lives of many Syrian refugees in Lebanon, the conflict in Syria and the fragile situation in Lebanon are both far from over. Please keep praying for Syria, and for the work of our partner in Lebanon, that we might see God’s powerful justice at work.
  • Pray for the many families receiving relief from the BMS-supported learning centre. Pray that the Lord will provide for both Syrian and Lebanese people involved in this project. Pray also that they wouldn’t struggle to find work or put food on the table, like Nour’s family did.
  • Pray for the children receiving schooling at the learning centre, that the ongoing economic crisis wouldn’t cause children to drop out of school in order to find work.
  • Pray for our partner in Lebanon, that they would feel God’s presence with them as they work through so many challenges.
  • Pray for the ongoing situation in Syria, that discussions with the UN would be constructive and that peace would soon become a reality.

Words by Laura Durrant
Photos: MERATH

Changing futures: how you’ve helped Syrian refugee children

Changing futures:

how you've helped Syrian refugee children

Our appeal to you was simple: you can help refugee children today. Your response was life-changing. And we’d like to say thank you for your incredible support.

When we told you about Gabi and Maher, we weren’t just sharing their story. We were sharing a story that could be told about thousands of Syrian refugee children. A story of lives uprooted, of fear. One of losing a home, friends, and tragically, formational school years.

Gabi and Maher are half-brothers from Homs in Syria. We met them last year outside Beirut in Lebanon, where they had been living for seven years. Home for them was a tent. Their true home, the one that war forced them to flee from, was some 90 miles away. Gabi was ten when we met him. Maher was 11. Just confident young boys, both smiling as they sat at the back of a classroom at an education centre that you help support through your giving to BMS World Mission. Being in a classroom brought some sense of stability back into their lives. But there are so many other Syrian refugee children who are missing out on learning. Which is why we asked for your help.

We’d love you to show the video above in your church and share it with your small group. Just hit the button below to download it.

Gabi and Maher sit at the desks in their classroom.
Thanks to you, Syrian refugee children like Gabi and Maher will be able to return to the classroom.

You gave an incredible £44,000 to the appeal to help us support the education centre that inspires and cares for Gabi and Maher. Your generous gifts have helped increase its capacity from 75 students to 120. These young people are now receiving an education. They’re making friends. Laughing together. Your donations are also helping children to get to the centre, and to buy learning materials, meet running costs and pay for teachers to receive more training. By giving to the appeal, you’ve made a very real difference to the lives of children like Gabi and Maher, and we can’t thank you enough.

Through a few kids, you are changing the hope of a whole nation

The work you’re supporting in Lebanon is a true blessing, and it will leave a legacy. It’s beautiful, and it’s blessed by God.

“I’ve seen lives changed and saved,” says Sakiba, programme co-ordinator at the centre. “Through a few kids, you are changing the hope of a whole nation, of a whole country that was destined to be broken, and for evil to overcome it. But now, that is not going to happen because God has planted his seed in the hearts of these children.”

Maher has fun at the whiteboard.
Maher's really enjoying the chance to have maths lessons again!

If you ever feel you can’t make a difference in a situation like Syria, we want to share with you the words of Gabi and Maher. We asked them what they’d like to say to you, the people who are showing them God’s love, along with everyone at the education centre. Their response was identical, and heartfelt.

“Thank you for helping us.”

All names changed

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