Home » STORIES » Aleppo is coming back to life

Aleppo is coming back to life

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]People still dependent on emergency help

Parts of Aleppo are coming back to life with people returning in large numbers to the bomb-blasted city and streets once again humming with traffic and people.

Aid to the Church in Need’s Middle East projects coordinator Father Andrzej Halemba revealed how thousands of people were returning to the city, with homes being renovated and 3,000 shops under repair. Speaking following a fact-finding and project assessment trip to the Syrian city, he went on to say that with widespread poverty and ongoing violence, especially outside the city centre, the people were still dependant on outside aid. Father Halemba, who returned from Syria earlier this week, said: “At present there are 16 types of aid being provided by ACN across the country, including food baskets, rent assistance and medicine. “Be it a doctor or a child, Syriac Catholic or Syriac Orthodox as well as the Latins and Maronites and others – the Christian families in Aleppo have said: ‘We wouldn’t survive without this help.’

“Without this help they would be forced to emigrate.”

Father Halemba stressed the importance of scholarship aid so young people could complete their studies and training and start work in Aleppo rather than migrate to Lebanon or the West. He added: “We also have the beginning of social life resuming.” His comments come after reports from Franciscan Father Ibrahim Alsabagh in Aleppo that 3,200 faithful – parents and children – attended the closing event of a summer camp including dance, sports, drawing and painting as well as catechesis. Another social event was a picnic at Aleppo’s Franciscan Terra Sancta courtyard involving about 1,200 Christians. Both Father Ibrahim and Father Halemba described the continuing fighting, notably in the outskirts of the city. Father Halemba said: “I was in the Latin diocese and one kilometre away there were bombs falling. I heard the bombs explode every day.” Highlighting that the city centre was relatively secure, both priests spoke of hope. Father Ibrahim said: “After six years of war, the time of reconstruction has begun – not just for the city, but also for hearts. “The conflict has left deep wounds, but along with the pain, frustration and fatigue I have also seen in people the determination to start living again.”

ACN supported 30 projects last month helping people in Aleppo and elsewhere in Syria.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Don't miss the latest updates!

Pakistan: Demand for justice after Christian man found hanged

The Christian community has refused the official account that Mr…

“We will stay, despite the war”, says priest in southern Lebanon

Since the escalation of the conflict in the Middle East,…

Drone strike in Erbil raises fears among Iraq’s Christians

The return of war to the Middle East has reopened…

ACN’s global petition for religious freedom surpasses 20,000 signatures

Billions of people live in countries where religious freedom is…

Algeria: The “Son of St Augustine” visits Annaba

The Vatican has officially confirmed that in the coming April,…

Mauritania: The challenges of ministering to a community of migrants

The only diocese in Mauritania has just celebrated its sixtieth…

Ukraine: “You did not only give us food, but a taste of God”

In eastern Ukraine people have grown numb to the danger…

Catholics returning ‘in their thousands, not hundreds’ say bishops

Thousands of Catholics in north-east Nigeria have returned to church…

Another war in the Holy Land. “We have never faced anything like this,” say Christians

With yet another blow to regional stability, many Christians in the Holy Land believe it is time to leave. Yet the mission of the Church remains, bringing hope and dignity...

Taybeh: Do Not Let Palestinian Christians Become a Memory of the Past

The last entirely Christian village in the West Bank, Taybeh, east of Ramallah, has been enduring a wave of attacks and intimidation by Israeli settlers. Hostile acts include setting fire...

Pakistan: Demand for justice after Christian man found hanged

The Christian community has refused the official account that Mr Marqas Masih committed suicide, and claim instead that he was murdered. Two men have been arrested. Church leaders are demanding...