For Christians in Aleppo, Syria, life remains a struggle
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
"Of all the families in Syrian cities, the families in Aleppo are worst off."
By Oliver
Maksan
NEW YORK—The conflict in Syria entered
its sixth year in March, but the ceasefire and ongoing talks in Geneva between
the major warring parties have for the first time given rise to a glimmer of
hope that an end to the conflict might be possible.
However, real security and peace remain elusive, for
example for the people in the hotly-contested major city of Aleppo. Father
Ibrahim Alsabagh, a Franciscan priest who works in Aleppo’s Roman Catholic parish told
international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need: “Even though there is
a lot of talk about the ceasefire at the moment, the bombing just recently
started up again in those parts of Aleppo that are controlled by the regular
army. And that is exactly where the Christians of Aleppo live.”
However, Father Ibrahim believes that even if the guns
were to fall completely silent, everyday life would continue to be anything but
easy for the people. “The situation of our families in Aleppo is simple to
explain. Of all the families in Syrian cities, the families in Aleppo are worst
off,” he said, adding that the majority of people are not able to buy food in
an amount sufficient “commensurate with human dignity.”
“Fifteen of our parishioners were recently admitted to
hospital and required blood transfusions because they were about to die of malnutrition,”
the friar said.”
For many, live has changed radically in recent years.
Father Ibrahim: “It is striking to see people who were industrialists earning
hundreds of thousands of dollars and who have now become destitute. They have
lost their offices and their companies with all of the machines. All they have
left are bank debts that they cannot pay.”

In addition to malnutrition, there are also other
supply problems. “Electricity is one of our greatest problems. Electricity is
only available in homes via the electric generators of private companies that
sell inflated prices,” he charged. “A family or even a single person needs at
least two amperes to operate just two or three lamps or a television or a
radio. Two amperes are not even enough to operate a washing machine or a pump
in those rare instances when water is available. Two amperes are the minimum
needed by a poor person or a poor family.”
With any less, Father Ibrahim said, you are sitting in
the dark. “As we have already observed in many cases, this has caused a lot of
people to suffer from a number of psychological disorders as wells as desperation.”
Families with children are especially hard hit by the
lack of electricity. “A family with school children or children at a
higher-level school or university cannot live without electricity since the
children cannot do their homework or study without it,” the priest said. Father
Ibrahim has launched “Project Two Amperes for Every Family.” “This is our
contribution towards covering the minimal expenditures of a family. It is a
form of aid that is also of psychological value and represents an expression of
solidarity,” said Father Ibrahim, whose work is supported by donors from
throughout the world.
Father Ibrahim
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