The heartbreaking photo of the little Syrian refugee boy washed up dead on the shore of Bodrum, Turkey (see the picture at bit.ly/1PZHvDV) strikingly illustrates the tragic plight of desperate refugees — mostly Syrian — fleeing for their lives from the Islamic State and other violent groups in the Middle East and Africa.
The three-year-old boy, named Aylan, along with his five-year-old brother, Galip, and their mother, Rehan, drowned after the raft carrying them capsized near the Turkish coast.
Forced to flee
Millions of refugees are scrambling to escape from the life-threatening civil wars plaguing several countries from Nigeria to Pakistan.
According to the British newspaper The Independent, half of Syria’s population — approximately 11 million people — have been forced to flee; with four million living as refugees in foreign nations. And approximately 2.6 million Iraqis have been displaced, both due to civil wars and the barbarism of the Islamic State.
Matt Wilch, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) refugee policy advisor for Migration and Refugee Service, told me that of the four million Syrian refugees, 1.8 million are being hosted by Turkey, Jordan has one million, Egypt has 200,000, tiny Lebanon is hosting over one million, and ironically even war-torn Iraq has opened its doors to 200,000 Syrians.
Where are wealthy nations?
But according to U.S. State Department figures, since March of 2011 — when the Syrian conflict started — only 1,554 Syrians have been admitted through the U.S. refugee resettlement program. This is shameful.
Wealthy Europe and the U.S. have a moral obligation to offer far more help. Germany is providing an excellent example here. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that any Syrian arriving in Germany would be granted asylum.
With 800,000 refugees expected to arrive in Germany before year’s end, Merkel has been urging Germans to rise to the challenge. She said, “There can be no tolerance of those who question the dignity of other people.”
Wilch said if the U.S. and other wealthy nations would provide much more aid to Syria’s neighboring nations, not only would refugees be able to benefit from improved services, but most would not feel compelled to take the long dangerous journey to Europe.
Wilch said only 37 percent of the needs of refugees are being funded in these neighboring host countries.
According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, approximately 2,500 people have perished en route to Europe since the beginning of this year alone.
What we can do
The USCCB is urging Congress to increase the number of refugees allowed in the U.S. to 200,000 annually — 100,000 from Syria and 100,000 from other nations.
Please contact your congressional delegation urging them to honor the bishops’ plea. And urge them to greatly increase aid to the Middle East nations hosting millions of refugees. The resources of these generous nations are stretched to the limit.
Also, to be of further help, please go to this link bit.ly/1LZxENG at the Jesuit Refugee Service/USA to easily submit (click submit twice) a letter to your senators and congressperson on behalf of our suffering refugee brothers and sisters.
And to go the extra mile, kindly consider making a donation to Catholic Relief Services by going to this link www.crs.org/stories/european-migrant/crisis/grows and clicking “European Migrant Crisis Grows.” Then click “Donate Now.”
Pope Francis has strong words for those who would turn away refugees: It is “violence to erect walls and barriers to block those seeking a place of peace. It is violence to push back those fleeing from inhuman conditions in the hope of a better future.”
Tony Magliano is an internationally syndicated social justice and peace columnist.