Summer workshops in Lebanon
To: projectamalousalam@gmail.c
Subject: “Volunteer application L19 – Name Surname”
Deadline: 14 July 2019
More info about volunteering with us here.
Deadline: 14 July 2019
More info about volunteering with us here.
A few days ago I stood at customs. Tired from 30 hours of transatlantic travel, annoyed by the 20 minute wait, I crossed that line as easy as breathing.
Why do I get to come home so easily?
I have often bemoaned how difficult it is to love a place so fractured as America. But what must the heartbreak be to love a place so fractured it pushes you out in waterfall of tears and tells you it is not safe to return.
These thoughts bubbled up at customs as I rounded the last leg of a journey that brought me to Project Amal ou Salam to volunteer with kids displaced and exiled during the Syrian conflict. At the outset of the trip, I stood at another border, in another airport. “Welcome back to Jordan,” said the man behind the desk as he scribbled in my passport.
“Finally,” I grinned back at him.
The last time I was in Amman, it was late-summer 2014. The war next door had been raging for three years, and somewhere between 640,000 and a million Syrians had sought refuge within Jordan. The country wasn’t quite sure what kind of host it wanted to be.
Driving the highway from the airport to Amman, I pressed my face against the window and wondered how much had changed. I’d been looking for a way to return to Amman from the moment I left four years ago. But now that I was back, the city felt like a stranger.
When I signed on to work with Project Amal ou Salam, I did so not knowing much more than that volunteering would give me the chance to provide Syrian kids with a day to laugh and play and explore their world.
I was nervous, of course. The last time I was in any kind of teaching role, I was in high school and helping kids learn how to stand up on ice skates. The kids of Syria deserve so much more than what the world has given them. I was afraid I wouldn’t be enough.
But I didn’t have to be. I was one of 30 volunteers, and together we could be enough. Together we could have fun, maintain order, and create a space in which every kid had a safe, memorable and joyful day.
The work I did never felt out-of-the-ordinary. I spent time in the photography workshop teaching kids how to find the best light to take a photo of their friend, counting cameras and making silly faces when the lenses got pointed my way.
Every night after workshops, I passed out in minutes, never giving myself time to reflect on each day. And every morning, I’d wake up and still wonder if I was doing enough. But a week removed from the day-to-day work, I can see how meaningful every moment was. When I look back on the hundreds of smiling kids, I know that those days were full of love, solidarity and hope.
At times the world feels like it happens to you – like it’s all so far beyond your control. It is particularly easy to feel that way about conflicts like Syria’s, in which decision-making seems to happen in rooms towering above the people who face the greatest ramifications.
It can feel like it would take a superhuman to make a difference. But that’s not true.
There are choices we can make every single day – ordinary choices – to give ourselves hope and to spread that hope to others. So get to work. No matter where you are or how small you feel, there is space here to build a better world. And whether you’re an Amal ou Salam volunteer or supporter from afar, you know that the future will be lit by the dreams and aspirations of these incredibly resilient children. I’m not sure I’ve ever believed in anyone so fiercely as I do the kids I met through Amal ou Salam.
There is trauma here. Loss here. Fear and anger here. But there is also hope here.
— Thanks Sam for:
– volunteering with us
– being such an amazing person
– writing a beautiful guest post for Project Amal ou Salam
– providing these stunning illustrations
-Project Amal ou Salam Team
As another week with the Project Amal ou Salam team ends in Lebanon, I cannot help but look back at our journey over the past four years.
Exactly four years ago I collected some money, bought some supplies and convinced some friends to join me on the Syrian-Turkish border dreaming of giving the ChildrenOfSyria who now lived there just a tiny little bit of hope – just a tiny little sense of belief that they would be OK.
Four years later, we welcomed 33 international volunteers from all around the world to our workshops in Lebanon.
Some of them are passionate about Syria; some are passionate about children; some believe in the importance of education; and some just want to be able to one day tell their children that they didn’t just sit back and watch as humanity crumbled around them.
The one thing that everyone has in common is passion. Passion to bring about change.
I watched, day after day, the children’s reactions to these 33 volunteers that had pressed the pause button on their “normal lives” to come be with them. And what an inspiring reaction it was.
The children’s instant connection to the volunteers and the volunteers instant love for the children, despite a cultural barrier and not speaking the same language, is a reminder that the world can be a beautiful place – we just need to be passionate enough to believe we can make it one.
Thank you to the amazing Project Amal ou Salam ambassadors that I am so blessed to be able to call my family.
Thank you for supporting my crazy ideas, for trusting my vision, for pushing me to think bigger and most importantly for giving the Children of Syria Hope and reminding us all that we are all in this together.
Because without Hope we have nothing.
Keep spreading the love ❤