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Syria’s war is part of humanitarian crisis

byCNS
6 November 2014 - Updated on 1 April 2021
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Syria

Crisis: A child receives polio vaccination at an informal settlement of Syrian refugees in Bekaa, Lebanon. Secretary of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum Msgr Giampietro Dal Toso, who just returned from a visit to Syria, said “the humanitarian situation is worse than I thought”. Photo: CNS/Reuters

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Crisis: A child receives polio vaccination at an informal settlement of Syrian refugees in Bekaa, Lebanon. Secretary of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum Msgr Giampietro Dal Toso, who just returned from a visit to Syria, said “the humanitarian situation is worse than I thought”. Photo: CNS/Reuters

A CHURCH official who just returned from a visit to Syria said “the humanitarian situation is worse than I thought”.

Secretary of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum Monsignor Giampietro Dal Toso told journalists in Beirut on November 1 that he had seen “the concrete face of suffering” as a result of war.

He also said the humanitarian crisis in Iraq was tied to the crisis in Syria.

“We should begin to look at this crisis as one crisis,” he said.

“We have people crossing borders”, so humanitarian agencies must look at the bigger picture, he said.

His remarks echoed those of Christian aid officials who work in the region.

Msgr Dal Toso, the second-highest official at Cor Unum, which co-ordinates Church charitable agencies, said Syria’s middle class had disappeared.

“The whole population is a victim of this war,” he said.

Syria, which had a population of 22 million people before violence began in 2011, has at least 10 million people who are refugees or who are displaced within their own country, according to United Nations statistics.

The effect of such a shift in demographics had driven up the cost of living, including rent, medicine and even school fees, Msgr Dal Toso said.

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Other countries also were feeling the strain of accepting refugees from Syria and Iraq.

Lebanon, a country about one-ninth the size of Tasmania, has a population of 4 million people, with an additional 1.5 million refugees living within its borders.

The refugees are considered guests in Lebanon – they pay rent and work for lower wages than Lebanese.

Catholic aid officials working in Lebanon say the government was, in essence, subsidising the refugees’ garbage collection and utilities, such as electricity, because in many cases the refugees tap into existing utilities.

Msgr Dal Toso said “the first priority is to stop the violence”, then to negotiate a solution and deal with the humanitarian situation.

The official, who met with Syrian bishops in Damascus from October 28-29, said the Catholic Church in Syria was helping the whole population without regard to religion.

This was an important way to illustrate that Christ was a bridge among peoples and “opens the heart of everyone”, he said.

He cited the work of priests and nuns and partner agencies such as Catholic Relief Services, the United States bishops’ international relief and development agency.

The Pontifical Mission and Jesuit Refugee Service are among other agencies working in Syria and with refugees in neighbouring countries.

“For me, the Church is a very big player … it is well accepted,” Msgr Dal Toso said.

He also emphasised that “this is not a religious war” but a political war with consequences for all people.

Msgr Dal Toso said “people did not feel alone”, but felt like part of the larger Church body.

He said Pope Francis’ initiatives had been well received.

The Pope convened a day of prayer for Syria in September 2013.

In early October he met with the region’s nuncios, and on October 20 he briefed the world’s cardinals on the situation during a general consistory.

Msgr Dal Toso said Syrians were making small contributions – $5 to $100 – to help their neighbours.

“Even in these little contributions they say, ‘I’m there’” to help.

However, even though “life in Damascus is apparently very ‘normal’”, he said, using his hands to make quotation marks for emphasis on “normal”, “people are feeling this insecurity. They are trying to decide whether to remain in Syria or leave.”

CNS

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