A letter to Muna
Muna with her Grandfather. Photo: World Vision
Dear Muna,
Itâs been hard to stop thinking about you since we met the other day. Perhaps itâs because we share a birthday. You turned one this week. I turned 29.
When I was born, my mum knew I wasnât going to wait. She gathered her things, rushed to the hospital, and shouted at nurses who told her I wasnât quite ready to be born yet. In her words, I âflew outâ, my father just having time to meet me before fainting and being carried away on a stretcher.
When you were born, your mum had the same instinct. She hurried to her midwifeâs home. The hospital wasnât an option, because there was a war, and she didnât feel safe there. She gave birth to you, a healthy baby girl, on August 15. Your father didnât faint, because he wasnât there.
When I came home from hospital, I moved into a bedroom in our half-renovated home with my big sister and our pet corgi. You didnât get to go home. Because when your mother was giving birth to you, your house was blown up.
It is my job to come into homes and talk to families like yours. I ask a lot of questions. People always give me answers. I feel that this is unfair, sometimes, because rarely do I have any answers for them.
Iâm writing you this letter, which youâll never see, because there are so many things that I want to explain to you - and to so many others here - but I canât. So with cowardice, perhaps, I write about them when I get home.
I donât know how to explain to you, for example, that your mother loves you, even though she often canât stand to be around you because you remind her of the war in Syria. I know that she loves you because sheâs put you in the care of your grandfather, and Iâve never witnessed such love as exists between the two of you. Your grandfatherâs hard, wrinkled hands are so big around your small, chubby legs as he holds you to him. I see in you my own father and his grandson - my nephew - and despite the horrible circumstances that brought you together, I canât help but smile.
I donât know how to tell you that after your birth, your very survival was a miracle; that 100,000 other people died in your country, as your life was just beginning. That you could well have died, too.
I donât know how to explain that the reason you drink sugary drinks instead of milk is that your motherâs body is too stressed to produce it, and to buy cowâs or goatâs milk is too expensive for a family of 18 in a foreign land with no income. I donât know how to explain that even though this tastes good, it is not good for you, and might make you sick one day.
As a humanitarian worker, you might expect me to make things better for you. So I donât know how to tell you that the Syria peace talks have been delayed, again. That every day more people are dying, and more children are suffering, and that people in other countries are too busy to talk about it. Your family escaped a war. Your mother carried you for days amid rocket fire to reach the border of a foreign land, with no possessions, to keep you safe. Talking probably seems quite easy, by comparison, doesnât it? But we adults can be a confusing lot.
After I left your home this week, I visited one of your neighbours. She is the same age as your mum. She told me that two of her brothers had been killed in the conflict. Her children are now frightened of planes and fireworks. Her son is obsessed with playing with guns.
She told me that surely the Syrian refugees must be on the television every day, and on the front page of every newspaper and at the forefront of everyoneâs minds, all over the world. I didnât have the heart to tell her that theyâre not.
When I lived in Haiti after the January 2010 earthquake, I spent my days and nights responding to questions, coming from all around the globe, about what was happening and how people could help. Here, sometimes I wonder whether anybody even wants to know.
The hardest thing for me, though, is that I donât know how to tell you that despite everything your family is enduring, the humanitarian community simply doesnât have enough money to help you.
I see family after family just like yours, scraping by, kids falling further and further behind in school, dealing with things theyâve seen and experienced that keep them awake at night. The number of people affected by the fighting in your Syrian homeland â a place you donât even know â is increasing by the day. But the dollars are not. Millions of people need help, quickly, and with everything: food, safety, water, healthcare, diapers, toilets, transport, education, protection. Long term, theyâll need infrastructure, paperwork, jobs, schools. Commitments have been pledged but theyâre not enough. Weâre not doing enough. We canât.
inseparable.jpgI thought about you, Muna, on our birthday, two days after we met. I wondered how your family celebrated your first year of life, spent in a foreign land. I was in a foreign land, too; Australia seemed very far away.
I went to school with some Syrian children. I was given a bracelet, a fizzy drink, and a mouldy half-biscuit from someoneâs pocket. I had received some bad news from home that day, and these gifts from children whoâd been through too much, and yet who still wanted to make my day wonderful, meant more to me than I could ever have foreseen.
An elderly Syrian woman asked me yesterday to put out a call for help on her behalf. âI hope that the outside world could support us,â she said, âto understand the situation weâre in, and to send us some help.â
Daily Iâm hearing stories, sharing concerns, handshakes and coffee with Syrians affected by this conflict. This places me in a privileged position to tell the world what Iâm seeing here. But itâs not easy. Sometimes Iâd just like to ask everyone, everywhere, to imagine for a moment the feeling that comes with sitting in the homes of mothers, who are listing their seemingly endless needs, and wondering what on earth youâre going to tell them.
My hope for you, little Muna, is that this crisis doesnât take away your right to a childhood, as it already has so many others. This is not going to be easy, and will require work, humanity, and commitment from a lot of different people, in a lot of different places.
So this year, on August 15, I blew out my candles for both of us. And instead of making a promise I wasnât sure I could keep, I made a wish.
By Meg Sattler, Communications Manager, World Vision
You can see the original article with more of Meg's pictures of Muna on the World Vision website.