Sometimes we don’t have enough food at home

As the economic situation in Lebanon continues to deteriorate, our partners are seeing more and more families struggling to put food on the table. Here Daniella Daou of LSESD describes her recent visit to one of their learning centres and the increasing hardships of the children she encountered there.

The Lebanese Society for Educational and Social Development (LSESD) seeks to strengthen the witness of the Church in the Arab World through inclusive education, community development, and church discipleship. The Smart Kids with Individual Learning Differences (SKILD) Centre at LSESD provides support to children with special educational needs. Middle East Revive & Thrive (MERATH) is the relief and development arm of LSESD, providing assistance to thousands of families in vulnerable situations, through churches and faith-based organizations.

On an early Monday morning in Anjar’s MERATH-supported church-based learning center, young Mazen came in with his classmates for a SKILD-facilitated session on psychosocial support. As part of a series on social emotional learning, that day’s lesson was on positively handling negative emotions.

As the children each picked out one emotion from a stack of cards on the table, Mazen’s friends picked out the one I dreaded the most: hunger. To avoid bringing up food scarcity due to Lebanon’s ongoing crisis, the children and I worked on positively resolving hunger in normal home situation. For example, when they come back from school and lunch is not ready yet, because their parents were busy.

However, the inevitable was brought up. Mazen raised his hand to express that:

“sometimes it’s not that food is not ready,
sometimes we don’t have food at home…”.

Class of children in Lebanon

Field visits always come with bittersweet realizations. The joy and eagerness of seeing the children one more time is always mixed with the crushing reality of their extreme vulnerability.

Yet I have never met such grateful kids, welcoming every act of kindness like a golden opportunity.

“Who’s happy it’s a Monday?” I asked at the beginning of our get-together, not expecting positive feedback. I was taken back by one of their answers, “We love Monday because it means we come to school.”

When you live with a refugee status stamped on you like an identity marker, you cannot escape the vulnerability in an already collapsing country. But that also means you count your blessings twice, because you hang on to them. Syrian refugees, and many Lebanese families, now live below the poverty line, on less than $1 a day.

No child deserves to go to sleep hungry, walk to school barefoot, or compare themselves to their friends and feel less. MERATH and SKILD’s work in church-based learning centres is the embodiment of the holistic approach of LSESD ministries.

 

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