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Top: Green Hope Foundation members pose with Syrian refugee children. Below: The members distributed prizes amongst the children after each activity. Image Credit: Kehkashan Basu

Dubai

The plight of Syrian refugees has been dominating news headlines for many months now. Social media platforms have several haunting images of their sad plight, especially those of women and children, who inevitably suffer the most. Feeling sorry for them is no longer the solution and it is imperative that we takes steps to alleviate their suffering as they have every right to a life of dignity like all of us.

Youth organisation, Green Hope Foundation, decided to bring smiles to the faces of Syrian refugee children living in camps in Lebanon. We wanted this New Year to be very special for these children and with the help of our members collected a large consignment of clothes, woollens, books, flasks and toys. A five-member Green Hope team flew to Lebanon and visited a camp housing the Syrian refugees.

Our main objective was to engage and educate the Syrian children on environmental conservation, as we believe that every child has a right to education. Through our workshops and other activities, we wanted to engage, educate and empower them so that they too become a part of the sustainable development process and start taking actions within their zones of influence.


Over a two-day period, we conducted six environmental workshops with each workshop targeting a specific age group. Several hundred children, between the ages of seven to 18 attended our workshops. This was their first exposure to conservation issues and their enthusiasm was limitless.

We educated them about global warming, the UN Environment’s “Beat Pollution” campaign, the need to go plastic free, how tree planting reduces the carbon footprint and the need to recycle and reuse so that they could reduce wastage in their camps and do more with less.

Our workshops were extremely interactive and we used music, songs, art and quiz to communicate with the children. Each group painted their dreams of the future on white t-shirts that we gave them and their ideas and expressions were truly amazing.

After each activity we distributed prizes that we had carried with us and their joyous smiles lit up the room. Since their camps are without electricity for most of the day, we also distributed solar rechargeable lamps, which would enable them to study at night.

The children would break into an impromptu dance and we joined in with them, sharing the moment. Despite being from different parts of the world, we became one thus proving the universal nature of humanity. After attending the workshops, the children said that they would organise a cleanup campaign in their camps once the rains stopped. They also planned to plant trees within their camps soon. All the attendees wrote down action pledges on handprint cutouts, which they put up on a “tree of hope”.

Our efforts were only a drop in the ocean of their misery but we left vindicated that we were able to bring momentary joy in the lives of a few hundred children. We also planted the seed of environmental action in their hearts and some of them would take the cause of sustainability forward within their own zones of influence.

A dream of a sustainable world can become a reality only if all sections of civil society, especially the marginalised sections are involved and Green Hope will continue to reach out to them.

 

— The reader is the Dubai-based founder and president of the Green Hope UAE and a youth ambassador of the World Future Council.

 

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