Kadar Sheikhmous, director of Shar for Development, a Syrian NGO that works
in the northeast, said regular people in displacement hotspots like Hassakeh or
the nearby town of Tel Tamer were the first to step up and help. Before aid
agencies had even started their emergency response, residents came out to offer
support in any way they could, he added.
In the city of Qamishli, near the border with Turkey, 34-year-old Helin
Othman has been doing her part, working overtime to deliver food baskets and
diapers to displaced people. Two years ago, the young Kurdish woman set up a Facebook
group aimed at helping those affected by Syria’s ongoing conflict.
These days, she is rallying the support of almost 50,000 online followers. Many
regularly donate money and supplies.
Othman helped 250 displaced families in Qamishli and Hassakeh with food last
week. She is reaching out to those who are staying with friends or family,
rather than those in shelters like the Hassakeh schools, because even though
these people are fortunate to have found a home to stay in, they are often off
the radar of aid organizations.
In the Assyrian Christian village of Tel Nasri, some 40 kilometres northwest of Hassakeh, 150 mostly Sunni Muslim families from the border town of Ras al-Ayn have taken refuge in homes abandoned by the area’s persecuted Christian community. According to three sources from the Assyrian community, the owners of the houses, the local council in exile, and Syria’s Assyrian bishop, agreed to temporarily open their doors to those in need.
Sami returned to the Assyrian Christian village after it was emptied out by IS. He welcomes the newly displaced people, mostly Sunni Muslims: “We’ve been helping the families who came… We eat together, keep each other company.”
“Lots and lots of people have invited people into their homes. It has been
inspiring; everyone is hosting someone,” said one aid worker familiar with the
situation in the northeast who wished to remain anonymous so they could
continue working in the area. “People are trying so hard to do anything they
can, and that should be commended.”
[The New Humanitarian]