Dear Deeply Readers,

Welcome to the archives of Syria Deeply. While we paused regular publication of the site on May 15, 2018, and transitioned some of our coverage to Peacebuilding Deeply, we are happy to serve as an ongoing public resource on the Syrian conflict. We hope you’ll enjoy the reporting and analysis that was produced by our dedicated community of editors contributors.

We continue to produce events and special projects while we explore where the on-site journalism goes next. If you’d like to reach us with feedback or ideas for collaboration you can do so at [email protected].

On the Streets of Damascus, Child Beggars Become a Familiar Sight

Alaa begs on a downtown bridge, Rania makes $1.50 on an average day from passersby and Mohammed asks for change alongside his handicapped father. In each case, they are responsible for a family’s financial survival.

Written by Alia Ahmad and Karen Leigh Published on Read time Approx. 4 minutes

DAMASCUS, Syria – At first blush, 10-year-old Rania was too ashamed to tell her story.

She spends her days begging for change on the streets of Damascus. “I never imagined myself as a beggar,” she says. “I’m so ashamed when I ask for money.”

Rania and her younger brother were forced onto the streets after their father died during clashes in Hajjar al-Aswad, a lower-income area of the city. After his death, she, her mother and four siblings moved into her uncle’s modest apartment in Tadamun.

The family had a roof over its head, but no income. Her mother, with children to raise, is unable to find work. The uncle is unable to feed an additional five people. They occasionally receive aid from the Syrian Arab Red Crescent, but the rising cost of basic food staples mitigates anything that comes in. For Rania’s desperate mother, turning her children out onto the streets seemed like the only option.

In her family’s eyes, the choice to “work” as beggars is paying off.

“Occasionally, I get lucky and I get 800 Syrian pounds ($6) a day,” Rania says. “Sometimes, I get no more than $5, but usually, I don’t make more than 200 pounds ($1.50).”

“Their Only Option”

Rania and her brother are hardly alone on the streets. They’re seeing more children join them, as clashes intensify around the country and people flee to the relative safety of downtown Damascus.

Last year, the World Food Programme interviewed beneficiaries of its aid programs in seven regions, including Damascus city and rural Damascus. The group said that the number of families with at least one member begging on the streets had risen from five percent to nine percent in just one month.

The organization said it was “their only option,” and that families unable to cover rent “are living in uncompleted buildings, abandoned stores, old bus stations, factories or warehouses.”

Since then, the number of child beggars on the streets of the capital has continued to increase. “Child labor is becoming more and more widespread in Syria, not just inside Syria but in neighboring countries. being a beggar is a form of child labor,” says Juliette Touma, regional communications head for UNICEF.

“It reflects how bad the economic situation has become, that families are pushing their children to work. Many times seven or eight-year-olds are are becoming the sole breadwinners. We’re seeing that more and more. These children who are begging on the streets don’t go to school, so it’s of huge concern for us.” (UNICEF says more than 1 million Syrian children are currently without access to education.)

The phenomenon is not limited to Damascus itself. In Beirut, the city’s landmark Hamra Street is dotted with Syrian mothers holding young children. In Istanbul’s Taksim Square, Syrian children chase tourists, clinging to their legs, begging for spare lira.

On one street corner in Istanbul, Mazen, 8, begs alongside his disabled father, who has lost his leg.

“I made it through first grade, but I dropped out of school to help my father beg,” Mazen says. “People don’t give me a lot of money but I don’t know how much we make, because my father takes all our earnings. He buys me a sandwich every day, and sometimes, he lets me play at the park.”

With the exception of his oldest brother, who washes car windscreens at a stop sign in the Fahhameh area, Mazen’s other siblings don’t work.

Two are too young to beg, and his father doesn’t allow his two sisters to work on the streets after a man harassed one of them, who is 12. Mazen would like to join his brother at work, rather than beg, but he’s still too short to reach the car windows.

The young beggars are facing backlash from residents in areas where they work. Often, their parents will drive them to wealthier neighborhoods and leave them unattended for the day, returning at night to drive them home.

“I hate leaving the house now,” says Munira, 55, a resident of middle-class al-Baramkeh. “Beggars sprint towards you if they see you give someone money. I used to feel sorry for these poor kids, but now I’m more angry at their parents for leaving them exposed to [all sorts of] danger.

“People are now in dire financial straits. They can’t afford to give beggars anything because it could affect their living conditions. There are many people who desperately need assistance but their dignity doesn’t allow them to humiliate themselves and beg.”

On the al-Raees Bridge in downtown Damascus, Alaa, 4, runs circles around her mother, who holds her two-year-old twins. Mother and daughter both beg.

“May God keep you. Please help us,” Alaa beseeches passing drivers. “My dad died and we’re hungry.”

The family, from the Damascus suburbs, is homeless, sleeping on the street, in parks or in deserted buildings. They fled the violence in their neighborhood after Alaa’s father was killed in clashes two years ago.

The presence of Alaa and her family – and other homeless child beggars scattered throughout the city – is one more signal that the war, kept largely at bay, is slowly encroaching on central Damascus.

“We occasionally used to see beggars here and there before the crisis started in Syria, but today we see them everywhere,” says Ahmad, 45, a lawyer living in downtown’s Ain al-Kirsh neighborhood. “The relevant authorities must stop it either by giving aid to those who need it, or by catching those who have taken up begging as a profession.”

Alia Ahmad reported from Damascus, and Karen Leigh from Tbilisi, Georgia.

Suggest your story or issue.

Send

Share Your Story.

Have a story idea? Interested in adding your voice to our growing community?

Learn more