It’s September, 2017 now, and almost two years have passed since the Raslans arrived here. It’s been a year since I last visited, and I can immediately see the family has become stronger, and in some cases grown thicker skins. Amr, who was having emotional troubles, seems to be different boy: he’s unafraid to go outside, talkative, even playful. “I was talking to him a lot,” Amira says. “He didn't understand what we are. So I told him "you are a Syrian boy. We are Syrian people. We went to Germany because that's where your grandpa is. Here you can dream of a better, beautiful, future." Questions of culture are starting to play out within the family too: one afternoon, Karam, their 5-year-old, came home from a play date at a German friend’s house - "My friend’s mother has beautiful hair,” Karam says to his mother, “and yours is even more beautiful, but yours is under the hijab. Why do you wear the hijab? Everybody should see your hair!” “One day,” Karam continues, “I’m going to marry a woman with no headscarf.” Amr, listening to the conversation, shakes his head. “That’s no good.” Amr says, “That’s not our culture.” "That's not your problem!" Karam fires back at him. “We can teach our culture to our children and they can adjust.” Amira says, later. "But in the end they have to choose.” Over the past two years, the family have been patient in waiting on promises made to them by their new country. Housing, schools, language training and other elements have all been delivered and life has started to become more regular, explains Khaled, the father. He’s just picked up Karam from kindergarten and he’s got to rush to his new job now. “Integration is anything but slow – it’s really fast.” He says. (5/5 of @ashgilbertson’s #InstagramTakeover) #ChildrenUprooted

unicefさん(@unicef)が投稿した動画 -

unicefのインスタグラム(unicef) - 12月1日 09時00分


It’s September, 2017 now, and almost two years have passed since the Raslans arrived here. It’s been a year since I last visited, and I can immediately see the family has become stronger, and in some cases grown thicker skins.
Amr, who was having emotional troubles, seems to be different boy: he’s unafraid to go outside, talkative, even playful.
“I was talking to him a lot,” Amira says. “He didn't understand what we are. So I told him "you are a Syrian boy. We are Syrian people. We went to Germany because that's where your grandpa is. Here you can dream of a better, beautiful, future."
Questions of culture are starting to play out within the family too: one afternoon, Karam, their 5-year-old, came home from a play date at a German friend’s house - "My friend’s mother has beautiful hair,” Karam says to his mother, “and yours is even more beautiful, but yours is under the hijab. Why do you wear the hijab? Everybody should see your hair!”
“One day,” Karam continues, “I’m going to marry a woman with no headscarf.”
Amr, listening to the conversation, shakes his head. “That’s no good.” Amr says, “That’s not our culture.” "That's not your problem!" Karam fires back at him.
“We can teach our culture to our children and they can adjust.” Amira says, later. "But in the end they have to choose.”
Over the past two years, the family have been patient in waiting on promises made to them by their new country. Housing, schools, language training and other elements have all been delivered and life has started to become more regular, explains Khaled, the father. He’s just picked up Karam from kindergarten and he’s got to rush to his new job now. “Integration is anything but slow – it’s really fast.” He says. (5/5 of @ashgilbertson’s #InstagramTakeover) #ChildrenUprooted


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

23,754

96

2017/12/1

Elsie Hewittのインスタグラム
Elsie Hewittさんがフォロー

unicefを見た方におすすめの有名人