Desert refugee camp in Jordan an oasis of learning for bored children
AMMONNEWS - The middle of a desert is not the kind of place you would expect to be able to sit down with a good book, watch a movie or surf the internet.
But that is exactly what children who have fled the deadly conflict in Syria are now able to do at Azraq refugee camp in Jordan.
The camp, some 100 kilometres east of Amman, opened a year ago and now has a population of 18,000 and a capacity of 100,000.
For young and curious minds, the major battle has been to ward off boredom.
Azraq now boasts a library nestling in the middle of thousands of metal sheds.
It was created at the initiative of the French organisation Libraries without Borders (BSF) in partnership with the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR and NGO Care.
'There's an illness that threatens people. It's called boredom,' BSF president Patrick Weil said.
'No other person could stay here just to eat three times a day. They need to be able to connect with the world to know what is happening. They need to look to the future.'
Four multicoloured cubes and two storage units make up the BSF-designed kit library dubbed an 'Ideas Box'.
Its design draws on transport containers used for music events, meaning it is easily movable and deployable on the ground.
The 100-square-metre space is 'perfectly adaptable to urgent humanitarian situations', the project's organisers say.
BSF deployed its first Ideas Box in Burundi last year, and then dispatched another to Beirut, destined for Syrian refugees.
Project offers connection to outside world
It boasts about 20 computers and tablets, an internet connection, a cinema, and electronic and hard copy books.
The reading material for the refugees was carefully selected by Jordanian, Syrian and Lebanese teachers, Mr Weil said.
A smiling Maram, 12, was one of the first to visit the Ideas Box, and got straight down to 'work'.
'I'm going to come every day,' she said.
'I love drawing and reading.'
Maram drew birds, trees and a blue river, in stark contrast to the almost lunar landscape in which she has lived since fleeing the war in Syria with her family.
Ten-year-old Islam was also thrilled.
'They told us we can come here every day, and that they'll teach us how to dance and act,' he said.
For France's ambassador to Jordan, Caroline Dumas, this 'fundamental project ... affects the children's future, allowing them to connect to the outside world and remain hopeful, to continue learning ... and build a future'.
The Ideas Box would also help children - up to half the camp's population - 'overcome the trauma they have experienced', she said.
According to the United Nations, the conflict in Syria has displaced 7.6 million people over the past four years and created 3.9 million refugees.
It has also claimed the lives of an estimated 220,000 people.
Jordan, which shares a common border with Syria some 370 kilometres long, currently hosts more than 600,000 Syrian refugees.
In addition to those at Azraq, another desert camp in the north at Zaatari has a population of about 80,000.
*AFP
AMMONNEWS - The middle of a desert is not the kind of place you would expect to be able to sit down with a good book, watch a movie or surf the internet.
But that is exactly what children who have fled the deadly conflict in Syria are now able to do at Azraq refugee camp in Jordan.
The camp, some 100 kilometres east of Amman, opened a year ago and now has a population of 18,000 and a capacity of 100,000.
For young and curious minds, the major battle has been to ward off boredom.
Azraq now boasts a library nestling in the middle of thousands of metal sheds.
It was created at the initiative of the French organisation Libraries without Borders (BSF) in partnership with the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR and NGO Care.
'There's an illness that threatens people. It's called boredom,' BSF president Patrick Weil said.
'No other person could stay here just to eat three times a day. They need to be able to connect with the world to know what is happening. They need to look to the future.'
Four multicoloured cubes and two storage units make up the BSF-designed kit library dubbed an 'Ideas Box'.
Its design draws on transport containers used for music events, meaning it is easily movable and deployable on the ground.
The 100-square-metre space is 'perfectly adaptable to urgent humanitarian situations', the project's organisers say.
BSF deployed its first Ideas Box in Burundi last year, and then dispatched another to Beirut, destined for Syrian refugees.
Project offers connection to outside world
It boasts about 20 computers and tablets, an internet connection, a cinema, and electronic and hard copy books.
The reading material for the refugees was carefully selected by Jordanian, Syrian and Lebanese teachers, Mr Weil said.
A smiling Maram, 12, was one of the first to visit the Ideas Box, and got straight down to 'work'.
'I'm going to come every day,' she said.
'I love drawing and reading.'
Maram drew birds, trees and a blue river, in stark contrast to the almost lunar landscape in which she has lived since fleeing the war in Syria with her family.
Ten-year-old Islam was also thrilled.
'They told us we can come here every day, and that they'll teach us how to dance and act,' he said.
For France's ambassador to Jordan, Caroline Dumas, this 'fundamental project ... affects the children's future, allowing them to connect to the outside world and remain hopeful, to continue learning ... and build a future'.
The Ideas Box would also help children - up to half the camp's population - 'overcome the trauma they have experienced', she said.
According to the United Nations, the conflict in Syria has displaced 7.6 million people over the past four years and created 3.9 million refugees.
It has also claimed the lives of an estimated 220,000 people.
Jordan, which shares a common border with Syria some 370 kilometres long, currently hosts more than 600,000 Syrian refugees.
In addition to those at Azraq, another desert camp in the north at Zaatari has a population of about 80,000.
*AFP
AMMONNEWS - The middle of a desert is not the kind of place you would expect to be able to sit down with a good book, watch a movie or surf the internet.
But that is exactly what children who have fled the deadly conflict in Syria are now able to do at Azraq refugee camp in Jordan.
The camp, some 100 kilometres east of Amman, opened a year ago and now has a population of 18,000 and a capacity of 100,000.
For young and curious minds, the major battle has been to ward off boredom.
Azraq now boasts a library nestling in the middle of thousands of metal sheds.
It was created at the initiative of the French organisation Libraries without Borders (BSF) in partnership with the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR and NGO Care.
'There's an illness that threatens people. It's called boredom,' BSF president Patrick Weil said.
'No other person could stay here just to eat three times a day. They need to be able to connect with the world to know what is happening. They need to look to the future.'
Four multicoloured cubes and two storage units make up the BSF-designed kit library dubbed an 'Ideas Box'.
Its design draws on transport containers used for music events, meaning it is easily movable and deployable on the ground.
The 100-square-metre space is 'perfectly adaptable to urgent humanitarian situations', the project's organisers say.
BSF deployed its first Ideas Box in Burundi last year, and then dispatched another to Beirut, destined for Syrian refugees.
Project offers connection to outside world
It boasts about 20 computers and tablets, an internet connection, a cinema, and electronic and hard copy books.
The reading material for the refugees was carefully selected by Jordanian, Syrian and Lebanese teachers, Mr Weil said.
A smiling Maram, 12, was one of the first to visit the Ideas Box, and got straight down to 'work'.
'I'm going to come every day,' she said.
'I love drawing and reading.'
Maram drew birds, trees and a blue river, in stark contrast to the almost lunar landscape in which she has lived since fleeing the war in Syria with her family.
Ten-year-old Islam was also thrilled.
'They told us we can come here every day, and that they'll teach us how to dance and act,' he said.
For France's ambassador to Jordan, Caroline Dumas, this 'fundamental project ... affects the children's future, allowing them to connect to the outside world and remain hopeful, to continue learning ... and build a future'.
The Ideas Box would also help children - up to half the camp's population - 'overcome the trauma they have experienced', she said.
According to the United Nations, the conflict in Syria has displaced 7.6 million people over the past four years and created 3.9 million refugees.
It has also claimed the lives of an estimated 220,000 people.
Jordan, which shares a common border with Syria some 370 kilometres long, currently hosts more than 600,000 Syrian refugees.
In addition to those at Azraq, another desert camp in the north at Zaatari has a population of about 80,000.
*AFP
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Desert refugee camp in Jordan an oasis of learning for bored children
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