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Refugee Camp Research Paper
Fire in the Camp Can you remember a day when you experienced a most frightening moment in your life? For me, it was the day that we had a huge
fire break out in the refugee camp that my family reside in. I can recall the encounter with the fire on that day vividly. My parents, myself, my three
siblings, and all my relatives all lived in that refugee camp at the time. It was truly terrible the most frightening moment to me, my family, and my
community. We had to process many feelings at one time. Feelings of loss, fear, anger, disbelief and many more. After experiencing this tragic fire at
the camp, I am truly grateful and thankful for what I have despite our loss.
I remember that day all too well. I lived in Kenya, Africa in a refugee camp named Utanga in the city of Mombasa. I was seven–year–old at that time.
Instead, I kind of looked like I was five years old. I was a short little skinny girl who was smart for her age. The day of the fire had started off like
any other day. It was a beautiful, breezy, sunny afternoon that day. Generally, it's mostly sunny and hot. At that time my mother was not at home. She
had left to go to the market to buy some grocery. My mom was restocking on some of the stables food such as rice, flour, cooking oil, onions, garlic,
potatoes, lettuces, carrots, and tomatoes. My ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
I saw smoke rise out of the houses. I saw a lot of people of the camp come out to work together to control the fire. Some of the people were putting
out the fire with buckets full of water. Some of the people were pouring sand on the fire. Eventually, the fire was contained from spreading, and all
they could do was let the fire burn. It was a very pitiful sight to look at. Fortunately, there was no one that was hurt due to the fire. There was no
house that had survived the fire. Except, the houses on our side of the road had survived due to the road dividing it into four sections or
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The Importance Of Refugee Camps
Refugee camps are temporary housing for people that are fleeing their country due to war, beliefs, persecutions, safety, or natural disasters. Refugee
camps exist all around the world, including the United States. These camps are important because they provide a second home to people in need that
feel threatened in their home country. In today's society,refugee camps play a big role in changing one's life. Refugee camps relate to the novel,
Unwind because the Graveyard, where Connor, Risa, and Lev stay to seek asylum from being "unwound", is an example of a refugee camp. Refugee
Camps have been around for as long as the Egyptian era. "One of the earliest recorded refugee camps is described in the biblical account of the
Israelites' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Unlike the current resettlement programs, refugee camps are placed in a specific place, enclosed from the public, and resettlement in the country do
not start right away. On the other hand, refugees that settle in the US start their resettlement right away. In addition, the current largest refugee camp in
the world is established in Kenya, Africa. Named Kakuma Refugee Camp, this camp is "home to some 100,000 South Sudanese and 55,000 Somali
refugees, most of whom were driven from their homelands by civil war." Founded in 1922, the Kakuma Refugee Camp sits in northwestern Kenya and
houses over 180,000 refugees from nearly 20 countries. Furthermore, the camp's conditions are in a threatening condition. Since the population is so
high, food source is meager and especially difficult to obtain for the younger ones. Equally important is the United States' 45th president, Donald J.
Trump. Trump became president on January 20, 2017. He signed an executive order that suspends any and all Syrians that are refuging into the US.
He believes that by refusing all refugees to the United States, it will stop future terrorist activity. Emma Lazarus' poem The New Colossus reads,
"Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free." President Trump breaks the rule that describes how the United States
will accept people in need. To illustrate how refugee camps are relevant to the novel Unwind, the Graveyard is the perfect example. The Graveyard is
extremely
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My Experience Of My Life In The Refugee Camp
When I was eleven years old, I was living in one of the small Bhutanese Refugee Camp called Goldhap located in Jhapa, Nepal. Life in the refugee
camp was simple for me since I was only 11 years old. But for most adults including my parents, it was very challenging. Since they didn't have their
own land; they couldn't eat whatever they wanted to like in Bhutan where they had large arable land for plantation. People in camp were not allowed
to work outside of camp. But to provide for their family they worked laborious jobs such as stone–breaking, road–cleaning, and ploughing (with an
Ox). My parents did all they could to satisfy our needs and some wants. Ever since I was little doctors fascinated me so when I grew up I wanted to
become one. However, I knew it was next to impossible to become a doctor in Camp because of financial situation. The turning point of my life was
when I came to America.
Thankfully, I was born in supportive and loving family. Both of my parents worked very hard to provide for the family. My dad was a skilled
carpenter thereby, he would go to different parts of Nepal and India to work. On the other hand, my mom stayed home and worked. She would make
Nanglo; a flat, round tray made of bamboo and sell those to earn some money. Besides that, she did various other works such as sewing, sharecropping
etc. Even though she was busy most of the time she never failed to encourage me to study. She was the first one to teach me the importance of
education even
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The United States Should Accept Refugees
The United States should accept refugees who have background checks. It is a humanitarian duty for people, and the United States, to help other
people that are in danger. Background checks would let the U.S know if the refugees are dangerous or not, so as long as they aren't in any harm, the
U.S should let them in. Also, there are some Americans that are doing their best and helping out refugees that are actually coming in, and that shows
American values. How would you feel if United States was under a dictatorship, and there was a war going on, and you had to leave the country
because of persecution and violence, and every country that you tried to go to, they wouldn't accept you because who you are and what your religion
is? Arefugee ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
And the United States themselves should be able to accept as much refugees as they can due to the fact that there are some Americans that would
do anything to help refugees out. For example, I read a document from the Boston Globe, titled "An Outpouring of Support for Refugees" and
basically talked about how Cheryl Hamilton from Lowell asked many people to help her out to support refugees arriving from Congo, Syria,
Myanmar, and Iraq. Cheryl and others basically gathered a collection of kitchen supplies, winter coats, blankets, and much more, just to give them
to the refugees that have arrived to a totally different place than what they were used to. And it also said: "Volunteers walked into the office and
said, "I can't stand watching the news anymore. How can I help?"" This shows that there are some Americans that have no problem with letting in
refugees, and are willing to do anything for them, because it help seeing what type of conditions they were living in, as well as what is going on in
their home countries. For example, there's a photograph from Time which shows a young boy covered in blood, and says: "Footage shared online
by the Aleppo Media Center is said to show a boy who was pulled from an airstrike on Aug. 17 in the Syrian city of Aleppo." which I remember
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Poems Comparison Essay examples
ICCSE ENGLISH LITERATURE POETRY COURSEWORK
In the poems you have studied a recurring theme is that of 'loss'. This can take many forms: death; identity; hope or loss of innocence
Discuss the poets' treatment of any aspect of the theme of loss in at least 6 of the poems you have studied.
A minimum of 3 poems should be taken from the anthology.
Poems for discussion:
In detail
– Prayer Before Birth (Louis MacNeice)
– Do not go gentle into that good night (Dylan Thomas)
– A mother in aRefugee Camp (Chinua Achebe)
Referred to
– Poem at Thirty–Nine (Alice Walker)
–Death Of A Son (Jon Silkin)
–Mid Term Break(Seamus Heaney)
Loss is universal. An inevitable condition of life; you cannot have one without the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
People would not want to hear that their loved ones merely gave up and died passively. This poem in itself is a celebration of life, the poem is not
only about death but it is an affirmation of life. To further emphasise the points being made Dylan Thomas utilises a wide range of literary
devices. Parallelism is used from lines seven to fifteen to juxtapose the different attitudes of the so called "genres" of men at their death. This is
used to outline that if you continuously lead one set type of lifestyle whether it is as a "wild man", a "grave man" or a "good man" you will not be
satisfied when your time comes to die. The only true way to be satisfied is to live a life of balance; only with a good contrast can you be at peace.
The general attitude towards loss in "Death Of A Son" is the complete opposite. Whereas Thomas reverently encourages the continuation of life, or
at least to fight against death, in "Death of a Son" death is an escape and as a release, it is therefore seen as a relief. The life of this boy has only
been a cause of suffering; suffering for his parents having to watch with no hope day after day and also suffering for himself. This is shown as he
"neither sang nor laughed" "but rather, like a house in mourning kept the eye turned in to watch the silence". The word "mourning" here creates a sense
of foreboding due to the
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Mother In Refugee Camp Poem Analysis
Remember by Christina Rossetti, Mother in Refugee Camp by Chinua Achebe and War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy all explore different
perspectives of death and its inevitability. In the poem Mother in Refugee Camp, Chinua Achebe exposes the reader to the realistic and horrific
conditions of a refugee camp, culminating in the lamentable death of the child. The language, the use of metaphors and similes and structure call
attention to the idea of cyclical death in a refugee camp. The poem War Photographer explores the continual cycle of death in war zones. Duffy
examines the predicament the war photographer faces – whether to intervene in the ongoing conflict or to uncover the reality and destruction of
conflict. However, Remember exhibits a... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This is shown in Wilfred Owen's Dulce et Decorum – the lines 'White eyes writhing in his face', 'he plunges at me, guttering, drowning, choking. This
listing of three is used to create a rather chaotic atmosphere. It too epitomises the horrible methods of death used by many. The phrase 'white eyes'
maybe suggests of his ghost–like appearance and the word 'writhing' possibly tells us the struggle to stay alive. Through these lines and imagery,
Owen is able to describe war and conflict in a more graphical way. Furthermore, Dulce et Decorum is similar to War Photographer in the way where
imagery is used to describe the
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My Experience Of My Life In A Refugee Camp
The life in the refugee camp was so miserable that we had no hope for bright future. My parents always told me not to dream of having a luxurious life
it is like committing a crime for us. However, I had a self–confident if I work hard and study well I will be able to do anything in life. make a secure
living for my whole family, but I was only a child I did not know anything about what my life would be like when I grow up. Every time someone
asks me what I want to become when I grow up, I used to say Nurse without a second thought. My parents send me to camp school, it was an
English medium school where they teach us, English, Math, Science, Nepali, and Dzongkha subjects. We were provided a pencil, eraser, and five
note books for each subject. We were told we need to keep all the things that they provide for a whole year. I was fortunate enough to get a basic
education in camp because not all refugee gets to attend school. I was a very talented student since childhood but due to lack of higher education, I
would not be able to attend college for further education.
My grandparents often recall their joyful life in Bhutan. My father has seven siblings, and mother has thirteen. They had a great life, my father did not
get to attend school because My grandparents had a lot of land, animals and a restaurant which they own. We had over tens of cows, sheep, goats and
many more domestic animals. My father and other siblings had to watch after the animal and help grandfather in
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Persuasive Essay On Refugee Camps
"What about Angel and my grandfather?" Steve asked.
"We'll look for them later," Shelly said. "Emily, can you use your powers to disable to cameras?"
"I think so," Emily said.
Emily imagined all the security cameras shutting off.
"I'm assuming the security cameras are off," Emily said.
"Good," Shelly said. "Let's go."
The teenagers quietly made their way to the fence. Emily took a few steps forward. But an alarm sounded.
"What do we do?" Allison asked.
"I don't know," Shelly said.
The security guards captured them. The security guards blindfolded the teenagers and they put them in handcuffs. The security guards then took the
teenagers on a bus. The teenagers had a long journey. But eventually, they arrived to an unknown location. Even though the teenagers had their
blindfolds on, they knew that they have entered a building.
Eventually, somebody took off the teenagers' blindfolds and their handcuffs. They were in a cell with no windows nor beds. But there were benches to
sit on, a toilet, a sink, and carpet on the floor.
"Welcome to prison," Skienski said. "The purpose of our refugee camps is to help you become citizens of our country. By trying to break out, you are
breaking your refugee status. Therefore, you're considered to be illegal immigrants. So you will all stay in this cell until your trails. Enjoy each other's
company.
Skienski left the cell and closed the door. The teenagers sat on the benches in silence until Shelly spoke up about a minute later.
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Greg Dickinson Refugee Camp Analysis
The conversation of meaning making is one of many sides. Is meaning automatically assigned to content upon its creation, or can meaning be made and
negotiated by consumers? In order to further explore these questions, we can examine a hypothetical situation. If for example, a United States based
production company distributes films to Yemeni refugee camps in order to take their minds off of their troubles and entertain them, some may be
concerned that this is just an act of cultural imperialism on the part of the U.S.. Conversely, those on the other end may argue that refugees in Yemen
are not lacking in agency, and can make meaning of the content themselves. As author Greg Dickinson explains, "...these audiences are more or less
conscious of their position as audiences and, as such, make rational, conscious decisions about the arguments the rhetor makes." Essentially, the
argument being made in this quote is one of agency. Rather than generalize entire populations of people as somewhat... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Those experiences then, inform the way that they perceive and interpret information. Thus, if we follow this logic, each of the individual people in our
hypothetical refugee camp would most likely have a different understanding of the movies they are being shown. In other words, while it is possible
that a person's individual identity may be influenced by content created by people outside of their in–group, it does not necessarily imply full blown
imperialism and erasure of the native culture. Author NГ©stor GarcГa Canclini puts it this way: "...culture becomes a process of multinational
assemblage, a flexible articulation of parts, a montage of features that any citizen in any country, of what whatever religion or ideology, can read and
use." In a time in which we celebrate multiculturalism and diversity, it is important that we remember the role of media in our understanding of culture,
as well as the individual's relationship with
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Mother In A Refugee Camp
Suffering takes many forms explore this idea referring to three poems in detail and to at l east three poems drawn from your wider reading.
The first thing you think when you are told the word suffering is torturing and death and yes this is a big aspect of the topic and it is included in
the poem mother in a refugee camp by Chinua Achebe but there is also other parts of it that is not just physical but involves mental suffering and it
is this section that is rarely associated with the word in question, Hide and seek by Vernon Scannell is a good example of how this piece comes into
play. From this evidence we can explore different forms of suffering and by the time I have reached my conclusion we will have a better understanding
of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
On the last stanza Duffy talks about a hundred agonies in black and white and it is said that black and white photographs are the most powerful
and effective forms of capturing the moment of suffering. This poem has a very effective ending and it is going back to what I said at the start
"From the aeroplane he stares impassively at where he earns his living and they do not care" and she is talking about the public and what they
have all gone through to get these photographs all for maybe five or six that will be picked out to be published and used in tomorrows newspaper
and yet when they read it as he says they do not care. This is not the only poem that has a really effective ending many of the poems have a really
strong ending to put there point across, and to make the reader feel emotion towards the victim of suffering. Seamus Heaney's Mid term break has left a
line all by itself to serve as the ending, Mid term Break is about an older brother who has come back to school to find that his younger brother has
been hit by a car and it is about how the older brother reacts to this experience, this piece of
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Other Side Of The Sky Essay Topics
Living as a Refugee Refugee camps are places around the world where people who were forced out of their go and stay temporarily. The camps are
not a nice resort or a place to have fun, they have worn down tents for people to stay and very low sanitation. In the book Other Side of the Sky Farah
the main character escapes Afghanistan and later on stays at a refugee camp. In the refugee camps refugees live in tough conditions, Farah and her
Mother have a hard time in the camps especially with her mother's problems, which many refugees also face. In the refugee camp Farah says "If I'm
going to sink anyway what does it matter whether I think we sink quickly or slowly. You lose your drive (Ahmedi 123)." These camps have poor
sanitation, are overly crowded, there are many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The refugees are highly impacted when they are sent to a refugee camp, refugees such as Farah.
Refugee camps are run by the government, by world organizations, or the UN. The facilities are in very low condition. Refugee camps are for
helping refugees that have fled their homeland for a chance at a safer place to live. The camps are for meeting their basic needs and trying to keep
them more safe, but many small needs that are still important are not meet. The refugees usually sleep in tents with very few belongings. Some
camps have washstand or areas where they can go to the bathroom and wash up (hygiene stations, WASH). There is a food distribution where a
delivery will enter the camp and distribute food and drinking water to each family or group. The also mainly have security point and then like
religious places and schools and shops ("Refugee Camp– Facilities"). They may seem like a very good and easy option to stay for refugees but they
can lead to many problems and there are many risks.The camps are usually very over populated. There were around 407,477
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Theme Of A Mother In A Refugee Camp
The poems 'A mother in a refugee camp' and 'Prayer Before Birth' emphasise the themes of growing up and loss of innocence through the impact of
tragedy and man–made horrors. At the start of ' A mother in a Refugee Camp' the first words "No Madonna and child" provide us with a symbolic
reference to Jesus and his Mother. Death is part of the natural circle of life, however a mother witnessing the death of her own child is unusual and
seen as traumatic experience. This links to the traumatic life the child has lived in only his early stages of his innocent life.
The mother gives her child a "ghost smile" this emphasises that her smile is an act of comfortless for her child, she is faking a smile as she has to
face overwhelming sadness. As a child a ghost ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When a child grows up throughout its whole life a mother will carry round a smile of joy and pride on her face, however this child does not have the
opportunity to grow into the adult he is meant to be. Similarly in the poem 'Prayer before birth' in the third stanza the poet asserts "Think me" and
"Live me" this emphasises the fact that the unborn child is going to be used by society for evil purposes. Normally a child dreams about the life ahead
of itself and can chose the life it wants to live. In spite of this poem the child is not even born and its future is already planned out. The child's
innocence is reinforced when the narrator asserts "I am not yet born" The child shows innocence through child like language as "blood sucking
bats" and "club footed ghouls" these are fears of a child the narrator brings forward, fears that normally a child would be to frightened of to even
think about let alone discuss. The baby becomes more and more desperate, illustrated in the growing stanza length throughout the poem. as the world
becomes more corrupted.the baby's final wish is to die if he wont be able to live a life with freedom when he asserts
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A Mother In A Refugee Camp Poem
Several poems in the anthology present the theme of futility. Explore this idea, referring to three poems in detail and at least three other poems from
your wider reading. The idea of futility can be classified into a simple form or quality of being hopeless. Many poets like Vernon Scannell, 'Hide and
Seek'; Carol Ann Duffy 'War Photographer' and Chinua Achebe, 'A Mother in a Refugee Camp' exploit the theme of futility to express their personal
experience and ambiguity of the horrors of war and the terrible human loss that accompanies it. In 'War Photographer', the poet demonstrates the futility
by detailing the inner conflict within a war photographer by exploring the suffering and devastation– both physically and emotionally– caused by the...
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The use of the present participate verb form "humming" is a paradox to the ordinary daily routine. However, it also juxtaposes the mood and
atmosphere felt in the refugee camp, because humming is associated with happiness and contentment. Consequently, these aren't the feelings felt by the
mother, as she is devastated and heart broken that her child will soon die. However, In the beginning of the poem the tone is longing, as the mother
knows her child's death will be soon. The tenor of futility and death towards the end is evident in the oxymoron "ghost–smile", and '"flowers" on the
grave which exemplify the pain of the foreshadowing death. Furthermore, the employment of the pseudo–oxymoron "ghost smile" is indicative of her
past life, which is now a ghost that haunts her. From the previous point, we can tell Achebe introduces feelings of futility and helplessness, allowing
us, the readers, to acknowledge the sense of despair and grief as the mother is incapable of helping her child who is on the verge of
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Compare Letter To A Young Refugee From Another By Nicholas...
Refugees
More than half the refugees around the globe are under the age of 18, even though children make up 31 percent of the world's population. Refugees
are people who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disasters. The stories that will be covered in this
essay are called "The Teacher Who Changed My Life," by Nicholas Gage and the second novel is "Letter to a YoungRefugee from Another," by
Andrew Lam. These stories have many differences between each other but they both left their country to America. What if you had to flee your country?
To begin with, Nicholas Gage retold his story in "The Teacher Who Changed My Life." Nicolas Gage was born in the village of Lia in Greece.
After World War II, his mother and two sisters found themselves caught in Greece's civil war. Gage's mother, Eleni, was executed for making plans
for her children from their village. Gage and his sisters joined their father in the United States. He met the person who changed the course of his life in
America. Her name was Marjorie Hurd, "a salty–tongued, no–nonsense school teacher" (Gage212). Marjorie was a wise and trusted mentor. She taught
Nicholas on how to put out a newspaper. "One day, Nicholas says, after discussing how writers should write about what they know, she assigned us to
compose an essay from our own experience.Fixing me with a stern look, she added, "Nick, I want you to write about what happened to your family in
Greece"(Gage215).
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An Article On The Syrian Refugee Camp
Aziz Abu Sarah wrote an article for National Geographic about her experiences in a Syrian refugee camp. Sarah focused on 5 things she had learned
there. The first being the fact that not all refugees are counted for. Granted this article is from a few years ago and we now know the numbers are in
the higher 5 million opposed to the 2 million Sarah states. Sarah then focused on how the bordering countries around Syria where many refugees have
fled are in crisis themselves, which one of her main examples involving Lebanon from another source I will discuss later. Sarah's next point revolved
around the neglect of the children's education there. Which we see an example of in Jodi Kantor and Catrin Einhorn's article "Refugees Encounter a
New Word: Welcome", where kids coming fromrefugee camps are so behind on their education they have to be put into special schools where they
can catch up. Sarah moved on to discuss her fourth point, on how some refugees are back in Syria, unable to get into another country. Sarah's final
point discusses how these camps are the equivalent of prison, from how they treat you to what is like if you want to leave. Life in a refugee camp gives
us the reasons states and other actors should be helping the displaced Syrians.
To begin, not all Syrians are in as bad of a place as they could be. Beginning with CNN's video What Life is Like in a Syrian Refugee Camp Near a
Russian Air Base, when asked why they do not go to Europe, even though it is
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Refugee Camp Journey
Many of the world's greatest leaders, thinkers, and minds, began with a humble beginning, however, through the law of nature and arbitrary, were
given or acquired resources, which enabled them to achieve the impossible, unthinkable, and most importantly, the remarkable. I see this opportunity
to assist Rustic Pathways in the Hill Tribe Support and Refugee Camp, as my first step, in my long journey towards greatness and success. Just as
Leonardo Da Vinci's first introduction to the world of art, mechanics, and chemistry was through his apprenticeship in Andrea Del Verrocchio's
workshop, so too, can Rustic Pathways serve as my introduction to the world of humanitarian work and aid. Growing up, my teachers and professors
did not simply refer to my classmates and I, as "students" but rather, as "the future." Being referred to as,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
As a child, I would always hear and read statistics on Hispanic–Americans, not finishing high school, high dropout rates, high crime rates, low
percentage pursuing a college degree, and even less receiving one. I resented certain statistics and reports because I was a child, and did not
understand the reality that many people in community face. So, as I began to grow up, I began to see people that I considered brothers and sisters, fall
through the cracks, not finish high school, become victim to the adversity, and simply adhere to a life, that was not meant for them. Because I am
witness to the lack of resources, and exposure in the Hispanic community, I intend to provide them exactly that. I will invest in my community, by one
day creating a community outreach program that will help instill the value of an education, create workshops, and foster creativity and progress.
Whether my outreach program makes a difference in the the city limits of Houston, Texas, or in the isolated regions of the Tibetan Plateau, I consider
the world my community, and therefore, aim to change it for the
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The Growing Up Of A Refugee Camp
Moving to America was the biggest change in my life. Before, I know very little of this world and my thoughts and opinion were very narrow. I did
not have the best education and I think little about my future since I lived in a refugee camp. I also could not open myself up to people of different
background because of the lack of diversity while living in the camp. But moving to America I was introduced with a new culture, education, and
diversity that changes my life and my views.
Before I moved to America I lived in a Thailand refugee camp called Mae La. Growing up in Mae La camp there was not a lot of diversity since most
people who live there were Karen people. All my neighbor were Karen, therefore I was not close to people of different background or people with
different ethnicity. I could not open up to them easily since I only speak Karen language. I was more comfortable with the Karen people too since I
know mostly Karen people and my school was full of Karen kids. I went to a mission school in Mae la and the school in Mae La refugee camp was not
well made like the one in US, it was made of bamboo and there was no floor. Mae La also have a poor education system so many Karen student
including myself did not get a full advance education like the one in America. Since I was still a kid when I lived in Mae La camp, I did not know
about the struggle of living in refugee camp.
One day I come home from school and my family told me that we were moving to America. I could not
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Refugee Camp Narrative
Last year, I was volunteering with the children at the Morris Area Elementary School, a volunteer asked me where I was from. I answered her that
I was from St. Paul, Minnesota. Then she went and asked why I have an accent. At this point, I knew the answer that she was looking for; her intention
was to ask where I was REALLY from. So where was I really from? I was born and raised in arefugee camp in Thailand. Now, I am not Thai either, I
just happened to be born in that country. As a Hmong in the refugee camp, I had to learn Thai as my second language and trust me, finding a good
education there was not easy. Why myfamily used to live in a refugee camp? Long story short, all the Hmong victims during the Vietnam War
supposed to live in a refugee
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Refugee Camp Budgets
4.1 Funding and Budgets
Environmental funding is the integral part of the special funding. Funding should be flexible so re–allocation to different sub–activities according to
requirements. Cost analysis is at the refugee operation camp it helps to donors for environmental activity. The relativecosts of immediate versus delayed
funding of environmental management activities may be attract to the donors and they try to provide more fund and support to operation. This
approach is opposed by the many donor who are under pressure and they are attached in this program. The environmental budget covers the emergency
phase which include process and practicalities. This two main area is needed for the emergency phase. Cost–benefit analyses limited ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Monitoring and seeking to influence policies affecting the environment in a refugee situation may be more cost–effective for an environmental agency
than direct implementation of field activities. The greatest impacts on the environment in refuge situations may be caused by policy decisions relating
to, amongst other things, camp siting, layout and size. National environmental policies are not possible to refer to refugee–affected areas, but can be
improved with basic of guidelines to create a supportive policy framework. Most countries have National Environmental Action Plans or similar
strategies for environmental
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Thailand Refugee Camp Analysis
Planting now could possibly needs your best effort; you will harvest later. Hard work always pay off in the end. And how you are raised
considerably determined how you'll eventually be in the future, whether in life or in the career field. If we believe everyday work to be mindless, then
that will affect the work we will create in the future. With an intention of being resourceful and innovative, I believe that one will be more successful
growing up in a society which believes that getting higher education is the key to happiness and success.
The rural side of Thailand, Refugee camp is where i grew up, home of thousands uneducated refugees. There were hundreds of other kids who do not
take school seriously because the camp is isolated from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
she stopped going to school because at that time there was no school in refugee camp. However, she always encourage, motivate me and my
sisters to focus in school so that we don't have to work under a bad condition. My freshman year was academically bumpy, but then I started to
realize that the schools here in The United States are much harder than my former school in Thailand. I did not understand the lectures so
eventually, I was behind the lessons. I felt like giving up because It was difficult when I know very little English. My teacher called my mother
because I was behind in the class. One day, she called me into her room. "your teacher called today. I know it is hard for you but I want you to
excel academically and live in a better life than me and your father. Please, do not give up on school and try harder. I know you can accomplish
this road", said my mom with a smile on her face and the gave me a hug. That night, I gave a thought to what she said and decided to try harder than
I used to back in Thailand because I gradually began to see education as a means of fulfillment and as a path toward making a living better than life in
Thailand. Today I am very close to earning ahigh school diploma. Getting a high school diploma is not as easy as it seems but indeed putting effort,
hard work and
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Refugees In Camps During The Refugee Crisis
During the refugee crisis there was some international governmental and non–governmental aid for the refugees in the country still those 350 000 –
400 000 (vidi pogore) were enormous burden for Macedonian economy. That was third reason for accommodating refugees in camps instead
incorporating them in the society. Their potential influence on Macedonians economy and establishing refugees' camps can be observed thru the
possible impact on local and national economy. Because these two factors are very closely connected they will be elaborated and overviewed
simultaneously. Refugees escaping from ethnic cleansing were arriving in Macedonia only with few necessities, and were relaying on Aid from host
nation. In that time the biggest economy issue for Macedonian government was unemployment, statistic said that around 32% of the population was
unemployed, or around 350 000 people. So people in order to survive were working on black market, and without insurance. At some level that was
tolerated from the government because it was providing existence for people and social peace in the country. Black market and working without
insurance had a big influence for local and national economy. Major concern for government if refugees were incorporated into the society was that
these 350 000 – 400 000 refugees, in conditions of no income was more than possible that they would seek for job in the country on black market.
Also around 50 000–60 000 refugees were accommodated mostly in families
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Life In A Refugee Camp Analysis
In 1942 millions of Jews lost their lives to Hitler's forces.The world waited to take action. In 2015, the world is still waiting to take action and is
repeating the same mistake that they made 73 years ago. The world has not learned from the events of the Holocaust because Syrian refugees don't
have what they need to live, innocent people are dying, and the crisis is getting bigger. They don't know that they are killing many of people who
have made a difference in this world and they need to stop because,they are taking good people out of this world and bringing in bad. We need to
take action and quit being afraid and not make this Holocaust 2. The world has not learned its lesson because the Syrian refugees are not living
comfortably, and they don't have enough supplies to live on. First of all food is becoming very low. In the video "Life in a Refugee Camp" it states
that the refugees get only thirteen dollars a month for food. Safe shelter is not being applied to the refugees,while in the refugee camps. They have to
rent the tents for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the video "Tying the Holocaust to the Syrian Crisis" it states " The U.S was always big in talk but we wouldn't help them." said by one of the
Holocaust Survivors. Also in the same video it says " Barack Obama should have got involved earlier." The world didn't notice until a young boy
washed up on shore because of no help from the U.S. So it takes the loss of a young life to notice that this situation is becoming a crisis that we all
need to know about and take action. The groups are putting fear into many peoples lives and this inter war needs to come to an end at some point and
that point is now.You can tell that the U.S doesn'twant to stand up because they are afraid they the U.S would get brought into this battle but we
already have because we brought in Syrian refugees. Fear isn't going to save us but action
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Causes Of Syrian Refugees
In Paris, France, one cannot walk the streets without seeing men, women and children lined up on sidewalks, sitting on old mattresses or cardboard
boxes, and begging for money. They are Syrian refugees. They have signs in French and Arabic saying "Syrian Refugee" or something like "pregnant
and nowhere to go." To many Americans, the sight of families, especially children, begging for money on the street is quite rare and unsettling. You
can see these refugees all over the major tourist attractions in Paris, whether while walking down the Champs Г‰lysГ©e or noticing them sleeping
under Paris's famed bridges.
In 2015 former French President Francois Hollande declared that France will welcome 30,000 refugees over the following two years and invest 50
million euros to support housing for refugees, an act which he believed to be France's "humanitarian duty." 2015 was the year in which Europe
experienced its highest influx of refugees since World War II. Of these refugees 337,509 Syrians were seeking refuge or asylum in France. Today,
thousands of refugees line the streets as described above. Despite successfully leaving their home country of Syria to escape the severe slaughter and
violence of the Assad regime and terrorist groups, refugees in France still face extreme hardship, as many are left on the streets with no help and no
safe place for their families to sleep at night.
Waiting for asylum, the Syrian refugees live in squalor, moving from one public place to the next just
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Culture, Cultures And Traditions In Refugee Camp
Cultures and Traditions in Refugee Camp I experienced many different cultures, ethnicities and traditions when my family lived in Thailand. We
lived in a Refugee camp and it was not like an America society. Every month, a volunteer group from a big city would aid every family in the
refugee camp with bags of rice depending on how many people are in your family. There were about ten schools in the camp which were public
schools and Catholic schools. Schools and houses were built out of bamboo and trees, and the buildings don't last more than a decade. Life was not
easy in Thailand. Not every parent had a job and they found other ways to make money to provide for their families. There were many cultures and
different ethnicities living in the same area and our neighbors spoke different languages and they were from different ethnic groups. There are many
holidays and cultural traditions that we celebrate every year by dancing, playing music, and having big festivals. The majority of families in the camp
had chickens, pigs, or other useful animals that help with everyday life. We had a garden in our backyard with fruits, vegetables, and other types of
eatable plants. There were banana trees, mangos, jackfruits, peppers, papaya, sugar cane and star fruit trees. Our houses were built with bamboo and
the rooftops were covered with hay. A lot of houses were on hills because the camp was not a flat place. We had no electricity or water lines connected
to our home. Houses were built
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Refugee Camp Narrative
I am 23 years old. I am Karen. I was born in Thailand refugee camp. All of my siblings and my parents were born in Burma or Myanmar. Due to
political issue and war between Karen and Burmese, my family moved to Thailand refugee camp. Both of my parents had no education background
and were farmers. I have four brothers and two sisters. When I was around 6 and 7, I experienced the most fearful event that unforgettable. The
Burmese soldiers came to refugee camp in Thailand and burned our camp and killed people. I heard the gun shots and bombing sounds. I saw my
house burning. I was scared until I pee. I was crying and my mom closed my mouth so that the soldiers' can't hear my voice. I lived in Thailand
refugee camp for 16 years. One thing I learned... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
I used to volunteer at church and taking care of the children. I love being around with them, doing fun activities with them, provide the food for
them, and teach them how to speak Karen language. My favorite subject is science. I like biology because I always learn new things during
lecture and lab. I dislike math even I'm good at math. I like to watch movie or play volleyball when I have free time. For me, success means
accomplish my goals and live a happy life as I wanted to be. My family and my experiences motivate me to not give up on my career and reach my
goal. After taking gerontology classes, I am thinking of minoring in Gerontology. I did service learning in St. Benedict Nursing home. I
volunteered there for 22 hours and I loved it. It was the best experience I've ever done. I want to have a career that I love to do and don't have to
force myself to do it. If I get to do the thing that I love to do, I'm pretty sure that I will happy with my job. However, there are some areas that I
would like to improve such as communication, and talking in front of class. My English is not very good because English is my forth language that I
learned. My biggest fears about choosing a career is that I fear that cannot achieve my goal and a major that I chose doesn't suit
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Research Paper On Refugees
Imagine this... Waking up everyday in a cold tin shed, a storage shed or an abandoned chicken coop. No windows. Limited running water. Clothing as
blankets and pillows. No heating. Everyone in the same boat. Everyone struggling for safety. Everyone hoping for peace. Imagine having no choice
but to find shelter wherever it may be available for the night. This is the global refugee crisis. According to Dictionary.com, the refugee crisis refers to
the movements of large groups of displaced people. Displaced meaning they have left their home, their live, their family and friends behind.
Here are the facts: 65 million people are displaced from their homes by violence and war each year. If that was a country, that would be the 21st
largest country in the world! 40 million of those people, stay within their own home country, but 25 million are refugees in camps in safer countries.
This means they cross a border into a neighboring state or country in order to find safety and flea the ongoing wars. Most of them are living in poor
countries. In Damascus and Aleppo one in four people are refugees. That is the equivalent of Auckland, Christchurch, Wellington and Hamilton being
upheaved.
The UNHCR estimate only 10% of about 490,000 Syrians find shelter in a refugee camp. Refugees stay for a long time in camps. The average length of
displacement is 10 years. The world's largest refugee camp, in eastern Kenya, called Dadaab was built in 1991 as a "temporary camp" set up for
temporary
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Substandard Living Conditions Essay
How Does the Issue of substandard Living Conditions Challenge the International Community and What are Some Possible Solutions to This Problem?
Bay Shore High School Nora Sacco International Relations and United Nations
Mr. NiedЕєwiecki May 30 2017
Every day, the international community is confronted by plethora of problems. Although these challenges may vary in scope and severity, they affect
enough people worldwide to warrant international attention. The difficult issue of lack of sanitation and substandard living conditions in refugee camps
is one such troubling challenge. The creation of solutions for this important issue is only possible ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Living conditions and sanitation and refugee camps are the main problems that almost every refugee camp has to go through. There are so many
refugees and so little supplies, workers, and living space so it makes it very hard for camps to try to have enough supplies and keep their camps
clean. A refugee camp is a temporary home to help people to get back on their feet, but these camps are having so many problems that they are
making it harder for refugees to get back on their feet. The camp 's main problem is lack of sanitation, people are coming to these camps and
getting sick because the camps are so dirty. The next main issue is a lack of supplies, people are coming to these camps in need of water, food, and
living space and some of these camps can not even provide these new campers with the supplies because they already have so many people that they
have to provide for. The current situation is unacceptable, as the Syrian war, lack of supplies and the western world's indifference to blight of the
refugees has caused many refugee camps to become uncleanly and over populated. The current situation in many camps and other people have come up
with many techniques to cope with the struggles. The camps have come up with my techniques to solve the problem that are not enough supplies, food,
sanitation, and not enough room in the camp for each refugee. The camps in this day and age still has many issues that they had back then, but the
problems are less
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Refugee Settlement As A Refugee Camp
The displaced populaces in camps are provided with help and security as a feature of the UNHCR's command and as a partner with the host
government to keep them amassed in one region(Kobia and Cranfield, 2009).
There is always a distinction between urban refugees and camp dwellers when analyzing the situation.There is also the dilemma of whether to consider
establishments such as detention centers or collective settlements as refugee camps or not.The characteristics of judging or analyzing a camp to be
opened , closed ,semi opened or non existing at all, is also an important factor to put in mind.The refugees development of their new urban context ,
their daily movements and their experience within the space, is what might lead us to comparing a refugee settlement as any urban settlement, rather
than a temporary solution (Dora М€Д±,2010).
2.4.2 The understanding of a refugee camp.
For one to understand the base of camp establishments , One of the key factors is the topic of how the governmental issues of character converge with
the legislative issues of space.Camps far and wide contrast extraordinarily, and the purposes behind their dissimilarities are to be found in the ways that
the legislative issues of asylum meet with the governmental issues of their basic rights of returning or resettling as verbalized by outcast
populaces(Sanyal, R., 2014).
When analyzing the refugee camp as a form of a city , There are the issues of community organization ,scale and their
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Similarities Between Refugee And Mother In A Refugee Camp
To understand the two poems, their similarities, their differences and both their anti–war messages, one must really study the poems in depth, as both
poems have a deep, unfathomable significance behind them. Both Poems look at the bitter hardships in war–stricken areas of the world as Chinua
Achebe's "Mother in a refugee camp" focuses on Biafra, Nigeria and Carol Ann Duffy's (no specified location) far from "(Rural) England" emphasizing
that most of us –the audience– don't actually experience any of this. Yet the two poems highlight the negative effects war has on humanity as they
bring the reader into a third person perspective of two first person victims of war. The photographer, although he is just a psychological victim
(passive victim) of the war, he is still deeply affected. We see this when the poem comments on his emotion "from the airplane he stares impassibly"
showing how the war has made him lose spirit. In "Mother in a Refugee Camp" the mental effect of war has been taken to a much more extreme level.
The mother, whose child has died from starvation (a much more mentally wrecking experience) sits there holding a "ghost smile between her teeth"
thinking of all those memories of a proud mother she once had been. This must be... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In what state of mind must a mother be? To ignore the death wish of her child? This is one of the many questions that the poems raises but leaves
unanswered, creating a mental resonance of the thoughts and feelings one might have after finishing the poem. Very
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Thailand Refugee Camp
I was born in Burma. My family had to flee to a Thailand refugee camp because our village was attacked. In the camp we were safer than before, but
we had limited opportunities with education. Several times throughout the months, our teacher would simply not show up for school. Those days all
we can do is sit and wait. Punishment in school was difficult. Our teachers would hit us on the arms or thighs with a 6 to 7 inch long, thick bamboo
stick. We would be chastised in public, for example, teachers making us touch dirty toilets, or verbally reprimanding us in front of the whole school,
rather than teaching us what is correct and incorrect. It was an unsanitary and unstable learning environment. We did not know these were bad
circumstances
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Essay about Chechen Refugee Camps and Education
Chechen Refugee Camps and Education
620/ PSYCH
April 14, 2014
Dr. Neysa Hatcher
Chechen Refugee Camps and Education
The creation of schools is one of the leading ways to produce hope and stability in refugee camps. Many would love to go to school because, currently
they have no other option, but to teach themselves. Refugees can recall having great memories of their past school experiences, which they use as
motivation to continue to learn. On account of my involvement with a refugee relief organization, I have been assigned the job of creating schools in
the Chechen refugee camps of Chechnya. The primary means of survival and daily focus for these refugees have been through humanitarian aid. That
assistance is made ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The development of an education system in the refugee camps is an impressive yet intimidating task. For that reason, the three things that I would
like to understand before obligating me to this project are: 1) How long are the refugee camps offered as a necessary placement for the Chechens to
be located in, 2) How and when can I start compiling data on the education levels of all the refugees within the camp on the different subjects of
reading, writing and math, 3) How would I start to find out the mental health problems of those due to the traumatic change in environment and lose
of identity, 4) I would have to find suitable teachers, buildings, and who will be funding the program. Hopefully, there are suitable buildings because
this will be another expense we would have to look at for funding purposes. Having a psychologist within the school would also help tremendously
because many students need the counseling. All of these items are needed in order to get things in order for the start of the project. Of course, there
will be other things that I would like to better understand, but those will come up in the progress of the work.
Ethnocentric Challenges That May Arise When Planning the Project
There have been ongoing and unresolved issues among the Russians and Chechens for many years. According to DeWaal (2002), "Russians believe
that Islam has maintained a stronghold in Chechnya communities for many years"(p.1). The fighting has coerced Chechens
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Mother In A Refugee Camp And Prayer Before Death
Human suffering is a poignant part of life and takes many forms. Explore this idea, referring to three poems in detail and to at least three other
poems drawn from your wider reading. Human suffering is feeling pain, distress or hardship in life. The three poems chosen all share the definition
of human suffering. While reading the poems War Photographer, Mother in a Refugee Camp and Prayer Before birth it clearly shows how the
horrors of war are the most magnified of human suffering. Each poem is reflecting a form of suffering that was created due to the violence of war.
Carol Ann Duffy reflects the life of a war photographer developing his pictures, showing the pain he faces from looking back at the photos. A Mother
in a Refugee Camp was... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"No Madonna and child could touch her tenderness for a son''. "Madonna" represents Virgin Mary and "child" represents Christ. Chinua Achebe is
implying that the mother in the poem loves her son more than Mary loved Jesus Christ; this shows how strong the bond between the mother and
her son is. In the Catholic Church it is believed than Mary watched Jesus die and her prayer did not help him. This may be the reason why Achebe
chose this metaphor to describe what the mother is going through as her prayer also did not help her son. Throughout the poem the reader can see
that during the course of the death of the son the mother is praying for him to be okay. "Rubbed him down with bare palms." Because palms are
usually used to pray, it reminds the reader that the mother is praying to try and save her son's life. Visual imagery was used to represent the
predictable death of the son in line fifteen: "the rust colored hair left on his skull". The adjective" rust colored" shows that the son has been dying for
a while. Achebe also uses olfactory imagery to further describe the conditions of the refugee camp. "The air was heavy with odors of diarrhea", this
shows the unhygienic conditions of the
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The Afghan Girl By Stephen Mcmurry
Violence and warfare around the globe are responsible for the displacement of large quantities of individuals from their homes and communities,
destroying their quality of life. Areas for displaced peoples, also known as refugee camps, lack the necessary resources and funding to support the
large communities of those fleeing violence. The poor standard of living due to the lack of resources cause malnutrition, illness, and often death.
Certain difficulties, such as lack of fresh water or medicine, become a daily reality for the residents while in a camp. Since the development of more
portable cameras in the twentieth century, photojournalistic images of individual refugees have been captured to provide more than just a photograph,
but tell... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Her eyes are wide, bright, and almost fearful. The slight anger in her facial expression, possibly towards those that displaced her, is overpowered by a
sad and longing look. This sorrow is evident in her eye–catching stare, expressing the story of the hardships that she has already faced at the young age
of twelve. Despite the troubled countenance within her gaze, a glimmer of hope is evident.
As previously stated, this photograph does more than just capture a surface level portrait of a twelve–year–old Afghan refugee. It provides crucial
insight into the substandard conditions these people endure. Roland Barthes views images in this way by analyzing beyond surface observations, and
seeing the message beneath the picture, or in this case, the girl's facial expression. "Camera Lucida" is about examining photographs as an expression
of something beyond the image that describes an event or happening, viewing the story within. A great photograph recreates a moment that can never
appear exactly the same again, evoking adventure and question as to what has happened (Barthes, 19). If the image can tell its own story through the
depictions present in the image without any words, then it is one worth remembering. The Afghan Girl tells its own story, a story of hardship and pain.
The viewer of the image initially sees a Muslim girl with incredibly beautiful eyes, but upon further inspection the image begins to
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The Late Homecomer Analysis
In The Late Homecomer, we follow a family of Hmong people through their many hardships and the eventual struggle to become Americans. A young
Kao, her sister Dawb, her mother, father, and grandmother manage to preserve through everything thrown at them by relying on family, a theme
evident throughout the novel. Love, however is what helps them prevail though the trials they face as a family and a people and is what becomes an
understated, but reoccurring theme in the novel, The Late Homecomer.
When assigned with choosing a favorite passage, one quote immediately came to mind. It can be found towards the bottom of the page 199and reads,
"I wrote about the love I felt I knew: Love is the reason why my mother and father stick together in a hard life when they might each have an easier
one apart; love is the reason why you choose a life with someone, and you don't turn back although your heart cries sometimes and your children
see you cry and you wish out loud that things were easier. Love is getting up each day and fighting the same fight only to sleep that night in the
same bed beside the same person because long ago, when you were younger and you did not see so clearly, you had chosen them." I first read this
passage as a part of the assigned reading. But I re–read, and re–read, and re–read this passage because it spoke to me more than any other in the book. I
found it to be simple, but beautiful, and extremely precise. Kao felt she had no personal experience with love but
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Refugee Crisis Reflection
I learned of the movement by reading about the refugee crisis online. Another way I learned about the movement was seeing news coverage
surrounding the refugee crisis and people boarding boats in treacherous waters desperately trying to escape their home countries. Media and other
forms of representation played an essential role in covering the refugee crisis movement. Depending on the news outlet I often saw how different
political ideologies infiltrated the facts about the movement. From my viewpoint I believe that there is a target market for the campaign. The
movement seems to be appealing to a wide range of groups. The campaign appeals to most age groups, it calls for people to get involved for all
different ages. There seems to be one geographical region that has been particular called upon to help the movement. The geographical region that
seems to be targeted the most is countries in the Mediterranean area. This seems to be true because that area is a central location that many of the
refugees have some, but difficult time accessing. I feel as if the movement is asking me to do several things. For instances, the movement is asking
me to lay down prior prejudices I may have had and to be more empathetic to the human suffering that is taking place in the refugee crisis. Another
thing that I feel that the movement is asking me to do is to have "open arms" to refugees in whatever compacity that I am able. I have partially been
able to do what the movement is asking me to
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Refugee Women During the 21st Century Essay
Refugee Women During the 21st Century
Refugees face governmental turmoil, political prosecution and natural disasters; however, women are further burdened by their female status,
biological functions and lack of attention to the needs of women in refugee camps.
Refugee women sustain emotional and often physical scars attempting to escape from oppressive situations. They are forced to leave, face death or
perhaps something worse. They may find these horrors anyway, but they will risk that unknown for a chance at a different life. The first stop on this
arduous journey is often a refugee camp. Here, if they are lucky, they are provided with basic needs such as food and shelter. During a presentation by
the International Rescue ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Women should be given the chance to start over without the additional burden of a full womb.
After these women and children are uprooted, they are often forced to deal with the dreadful possibility of experiencing abuse, rape, childbirth and
protecting children, often without the assistance of a partner. These hardships are doubtfully given the attention and resources needed as noted by
the lack of security in refugee camps. It is not an easy journey for boys or men either, but it must be extraordinarily difficult for a young girl
experiencing her period for the first time while fighting off a perverse stranger in a refugee barracks or recovering from a rape only to discover there is
a pregnancy to deal with. Such realities must cause such distress as to make a woman feel hopeless and perhaps invite death as a less frightening option.
It is sad that the plight of these women does not stop at new borders. In the case of refugee women, even if they are luck enough to reach a host
country they often find themselves begging for asylum. They are likely forced to give details of experiences they have had and may hesitate to be
completely open about the terror that awaits them if they are forced to return home.
When immigrant and refugee women find themselves starting over in a new country, such as the United States, they may meet with limits on
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Personal Statement For A Student 's Entry From A Muslim /...
Every time a new family comes into the guidance department there should always be a meeting accessing all needs before the student's entry to the
school. When I receive notification of a student arriving from a Muslim/Iraq refugee camp I will set up a plan to ensure that the student and family
feel at ease when arriving into a new school environment. Before preparing this plan, I would do my own research on the student's background,
culture, and community. Simple knowledge of this will allow for less assumptions and generalizations. In order to establish a well–organized meeting I
would prepare all documents that are needed for the family to fill out. The guidance office already has the forms translated so it is just a matter of
gathering the forms in the language needed. After gathering all the forms the next step would be finding a translator to explain the documents to the
family as well as translate for myself since I will not be speaking their language. To find a translator in the school I would send out an email
notification asking all faculty and staff if they know the language. If that ends up not working out I would contact the International Red Cross
relocation effort and talk to them to see if a translator can be present for the meeting with the family.
Once the paperwork documents and translator are ready for the family I will set up a meeting. First, I believe it is important to connect and have a
conversation with the family. Having the family explain their
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Kakuma Refugee Camp Analysis
The long Journey that transformed my life.
Thousands of South Sudanese refugees that were displaced by war have been living in the Kenyan, Kakuma refugee camp since early 1990s. I was
there since August 1992. But after I finished my high school in November 11, 2003, a South Sudanese friend who came earlier to Australia in the
same year sent me a humanitarian application form. I filled that application and within a month I received the fill number. But, I had to wait for almost
a year to be scheduled for an interview. Hence, in late 2004, my name was listed on the notification boards in kakuma refugee camp. That notice board
was to be near to what we used to called zone three market/shopping centre or equivalent to the malls here in Australia. ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Throughout the night before the interview day, my heart rate beats was faster than normal. I did not know what was going to ensue. I was
overwhelmed with both nervousness and joy. I was inquisitive about what kind of questions I could be asked as I did not know the interviewer.
Those were queries still playing on my head. It was common that time you might get accepted or rejected. Both possibilities were illustrious. But, in
anyway, I had to wait until I know exactly which way to go on the interview day. I presented myself to the IOM multifaceted site on interview day.
Suddenly, after I spent 10–15 minutes of the interview, I was told that I had passed the interview. It came into my mind that my life had changed for
the better. To my attentive, it seemed that everything was prepared for me. I started to see myself entering into the lists of rich people. Everyone
used to believe that whoever came to the West or living in the western world are all rich people. Even before an approval letter or travel document to
Australia was given, it was virtually sounded that I had been given the ticket to a dreamland. I could party and sung few songs that I knew. I and my
friends travelled within/between zones
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The Life Of A Refugee Camp
Life is like a drop of water floating on the surface of the lotus leaf. I cannot trust it when people claim that life can't be changed because of my own life
story. How could anyone believe that I was born in a refugee camp? As a matter of fact, I was born there.
In the early 1990's one of the smallest countries in the world, Bhutan was politically active because of growing communism within the nation. At that
time, the country was populated with Nepali and Drukpas; two distinct groups of people. One group eats beef for their finest food and the other group
prays to cows as a god. For hundreds of years these two groups cooperated with each other and had a good relationship. Then that relationship changed
when the Bhutanese people ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
My parents were among this group. For the next eighteen years of their lives, they remained refugees until the United States of America legally brought
us here to Virginia.
Looking back, I can't even imagine how I spent my life back in the refugee camp in Nepal. It was not only a hard life, but an impossible one. There
were various problems in the refugee camp like scarcity of basic needs and the unavailability of better education.
In the refugee camp, basic needs such as food, clothes, and shelter were hard to find. My family had to depend on small biweekly rations.
Sometimes we ran out of rations and had to starve the rest of the week. With scarce nutritious food, it was impossible to manage a good diet and, as
a result, it was hard to maintain good health. Clothing was another problem in the refugee camp. We did not have warm jackets and coats to keep
ourselves safe from the cold during the harsh Nepali winters. The price of clothing was very high. Since we did not have money, buying them was
not an option. Each year, many people died in the camp as a result. People also turned to suicide as a way to end their suffering. When people want for
something and continue to not get it, then they become more frustrated with each passing day. They begin to no longer see the value of life. As a
result, they take their life making a statement that dying was better than living in the
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Refugee Camp Research Paper

  • 1. Refugee Camp Research Paper Fire in the Camp Can you remember a day when you experienced a most frightening moment in your life? For me, it was the day that we had a huge fire break out in the refugee camp that my family reside in. I can recall the encounter with the fire on that day vividly. My parents, myself, my three siblings, and all my relatives all lived in that refugee camp at the time. It was truly terrible the most frightening moment to me, my family, and my community. We had to process many feelings at one time. Feelings of loss, fear, anger, disbelief and many more. After experiencing this tragic fire at the camp, I am truly grateful and thankful for what I have despite our loss. I remember that day all too well. I lived in Kenya, Africa in a refugee camp named Utanga in the city of Mombasa. I was seven–year–old at that time. Instead, I kind of looked like I was five years old. I was a short little skinny girl who was smart for her age. The day of the fire had started off like any other day. It was a beautiful, breezy, sunny afternoon that day. Generally, it's mostly sunny and hot. At that time my mother was not at home. She had left to go to the market to buy some grocery. My mom was restocking on some of the stables food such as rice, flour, cooking oil, onions, garlic, potatoes, lettuces, carrots, and tomatoes. My ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I saw smoke rise out of the houses. I saw a lot of people of the camp come out to work together to control the fire. Some of the people were putting out the fire with buckets full of water. Some of the people were pouring sand on the fire. Eventually, the fire was contained from spreading, and all they could do was let the fire burn. It was a very pitiful sight to look at. Fortunately, there was no one that was hurt due to the fire. There was no house that had survived the fire. Except, the houses on our side of the road had survived due to the road dividing it into four sections or ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. The Importance Of Refugee Camps Refugee camps are temporary housing for people that are fleeing their country due to war, beliefs, persecutions, safety, or natural disasters. Refugee camps exist all around the world, including the United States. These camps are important because they provide a second home to people in need that feel threatened in their home country. In today's society,refugee camps play a big role in changing one's life. Refugee camps relate to the novel, Unwind because the Graveyard, where Connor, Risa, and Lev stay to seek asylum from being "unwound", is an example of a refugee camp. Refugee Camps have been around for as long as the Egyptian era. "One of the earliest recorded refugee camps is described in the biblical account of the Israelites' ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Unlike the current resettlement programs, refugee camps are placed in a specific place, enclosed from the public, and resettlement in the country do not start right away. On the other hand, refugees that settle in the US start their resettlement right away. In addition, the current largest refugee camp in the world is established in Kenya, Africa. Named Kakuma Refugee Camp, this camp is "home to some 100,000 South Sudanese and 55,000 Somali refugees, most of whom were driven from their homelands by civil war." Founded in 1922, the Kakuma Refugee Camp sits in northwestern Kenya and houses over 180,000 refugees from nearly 20 countries. Furthermore, the camp's conditions are in a threatening condition. Since the population is so high, food source is meager and especially difficult to obtain for the younger ones. Equally important is the United States' 45th president, Donald J. Trump. Trump became president on January 20, 2017. He signed an executive order that suspends any and all Syrians that are refuging into the US. He believes that by refusing all refugees to the United States, it will stop future terrorist activity. Emma Lazarus' poem The New Colossus reads, "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free." President Trump breaks the rule that describes how the United States will accept people in need. To illustrate how refugee camps are relevant to the novel Unwind, the Graveyard is the perfect example. The Graveyard is extremely ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. My Experience Of My Life In The Refugee Camp When I was eleven years old, I was living in one of the small Bhutanese Refugee Camp called Goldhap located in Jhapa, Nepal. Life in the refugee camp was simple for me since I was only 11 years old. But for most adults including my parents, it was very challenging. Since they didn't have their own land; they couldn't eat whatever they wanted to like in Bhutan where they had large arable land for plantation. People in camp were not allowed to work outside of camp. But to provide for their family they worked laborious jobs such as stone–breaking, road–cleaning, and ploughing (with an Ox). My parents did all they could to satisfy our needs and some wants. Ever since I was little doctors fascinated me so when I grew up I wanted to become one. However, I knew it was next to impossible to become a doctor in Camp because of financial situation. The turning point of my life was when I came to America. Thankfully, I was born in supportive and loving family. Both of my parents worked very hard to provide for the family. My dad was a skilled carpenter thereby, he would go to different parts of Nepal and India to work. On the other hand, my mom stayed home and worked. She would make Nanglo; a flat, round tray made of bamboo and sell those to earn some money. Besides that, she did various other works such as sewing, sharecropping etc. Even though she was busy most of the time she never failed to encourage me to study. She was the first one to teach me the importance of education even ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. The United States Should Accept Refugees The United States should accept refugees who have background checks. It is a humanitarian duty for people, and the United States, to help other people that are in danger. Background checks would let the U.S know if the refugees are dangerous or not, so as long as they aren't in any harm, the U.S should let them in. Also, there are some Americans that are doing their best and helping out refugees that are actually coming in, and that shows American values. How would you feel if United States was under a dictatorship, and there was a war going on, and you had to leave the country because of persecution and violence, and every country that you tried to go to, they wouldn't accept you because who you are and what your religion is? Arefugee ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... And the United States themselves should be able to accept as much refugees as they can due to the fact that there are some Americans that would do anything to help refugees out. For example, I read a document from the Boston Globe, titled "An Outpouring of Support for Refugees" and basically talked about how Cheryl Hamilton from Lowell asked many people to help her out to support refugees arriving from Congo, Syria, Myanmar, and Iraq. Cheryl and others basically gathered a collection of kitchen supplies, winter coats, blankets, and much more, just to give them to the refugees that have arrived to a totally different place than what they were used to. And it also said: "Volunteers walked into the office and said, "I can't stand watching the news anymore. How can I help?"" This shows that there are some Americans that have no problem with letting in refugees, and are willing to do anything for them, because it help seeing what type of conditions they were living in, as well as what is going on in their home countries. For example, there's a photograph from Time which shows a young boy covered in blood, and says: "Footage shared online by the Aleppo Media Center is said to show a boy who was pulled from an airstrike on Aug. 17 in the Syrian city of Aleppo." which I remember ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Poems Comparison Essay examples ICCSE ENGLISH LITERATURE POETRY COURSEWORK In the poems you have studied a recurring theme is that of 'loss'. This can take many forms: death; identity; hope or loss of innocence Discuss the poets' treatment of any aspect of the theme of loss in at least 6 of the poems you have studied. A minimum of 3 poems should be taken from the anthology. Poems for discussion: In detail – Prayer Before Birth (Louis MacNeice) – Do not go gentle into that good night (Dylan Thomas) – A mother in aRefugee Camp (Chinua Achebe) Referred to – Poem at Thirty–Nine (Alice Walker) –Death Of A Son (Jon Silkin) –Mid Term Break(Seamus Heaney) Loss is universal. An inevitable condition of life; you cannot have one without the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... People would not want to hear that their loved ones merely gave up and died passively. This poem in itself is a celebration of life, the poem is not only about death but it is an affirmation of life. To further emphasise the points being made Dylan Thomas utilises a wide range of literary devices. Parallelism is used from lines seven to fifteen to juxtapose the different attitudes of the so called "genres" of men at their death. This is used to outline that if you continuously lead one set type of lifestyle whether it is as a "wild man", a "grave man" or a "good man" you will not be satisfied when your time comes to die. The only true way to be satisfied is to live a life of balance; only with a good contrast can you be at peace. The general attitude towards loss in "Death Of A Son" is the complete opposite. Whereas Thomas reverently encourages the continuation of life, or at least to fight against death, in "Death of a Son" death is an escape and as a release, it is therefore seen as a relief. The life of this boy has only been a cause of suffering; suffering for his parents having to watch with no hope day after day and also suffering for himself. This is shown as he "neither sang nor laughed" "but rather, like a house in mourning kept the eye turned in to watch the silence". The word "mourning" here creates a sense
  • 6. of foreboding due to the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Mother In Refugee Camp Poem Analysis Remember by Christina Rossetti, Mother in Refugee Camp by Chinua Achebe and War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy all explore different perspectives of death and its inevitability. In the poem Mother in Refugee Camp, Chinua Achebe exposes the reader to the realistic and horrific conditions of a refugee camp, culminating in the lamentable death of the child. The language, the use of metaphors and similes and structure call attention to the idea of cyclical death in a refugee camp. The poem War Photographer explores the continual cycle of death in war zones. Duffy examines the predicament the war photographer faces – whether to intervene in the ongoing conflict or to uncover the reality and destruction of conflict. However, Remember exhibits a... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This is shown in Wilfred Owen's Dulce et Decorum – the lines 'White eyes writhing in his face', 'he plunges at me, guttering, drowning, choking. This listing of three is used to create a rather chaotic atmosphere. It too epitomises the horrible methods of death used by many. The phrase 'white eyes' maybe suggests of his ghost–like appearance and the word 'writhing' possibly tells us the struggle to stay alive. Through these lines and imagery, Owen is able to describe war and conflict in a more graphical way. Furthermore, Dulce et Decorum is similar to War Photographer in the way where imagery is used to describe the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. My Experience Of My Life In A Refugee Camp The life in the refugee camp was so miserable that we had no hope for bright future. My parents always told me not to dream of having a luxurious life it is like committing a crime for us. However, I had a self–confident if I work hard and study well I will be able to do anything in life. make a secure living for my whole family, but I was only a child I did not know anything about what my life would be like when I grow up. Every time someone asks me what I want to become when I grow up, I used to say Nurse without a second thought. My parents send me to camp school, it was an English medium school where they teach us, English, Math, Science, Nepali, and Dzongkha subjects. We were provided a pencil, eraser, and five note books for each subject. We were told we need to keep all the things that they provide for a whole year. I was fortunate enough to get a basic education in camp because not all refugee gets to attend school. I was a very talented student since childhood but due to lack of higher education, I would not be able to attend college for further education. My grandparents often recall their joyful life in Bhutan. My father has seven siblings, and mother has thirteen. They had a great life, my father did not get to attend school because My grandparents had a lot of land, animals and a restaurant which they own. We had over tens of cows, sheep, goats and many more domestic animals. My father and other siblings had to watch after the animal and help grandfather in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Persuasive Essay On Refugee Camps "What about Angel and my grandfather?" Steve asked. "We'll look for them later," Shelly said. "Emily, can you use your powers to disable to cameras?" "I think so," Emily said. Emily imagined all the security cameras shutting off. "I'm assuming the security cameras are off," Emily said. "Good," Shelly said. "Let's go." The teenagers quietly made their way to the fence. Emily took a few steps forward. But an alarm sounded. "What do we do?" Allison asked. "I don't know," Shelly said. The security guards captured them. The security guards blindfolded the teenagers and they put them in handcuffs. The security guards then took the teenagers on a bus. The teenagers had a long journey. But eventually, they arrived to an unknown location. Even though the teenagers had their blindfolds on, they knew that they have entered a building. Eventually, somebody took off the teenagers' blindfolds and their handcuffs. They were in a cell with no windows nor beds. But there were benches to sit on, a toilet, a sink, and carpet on the floor. "Welcome to prison," Skienski said. "The purpose of our refugee camps is to help you become citizens of our country. By trying to break out, you are breaking your refugee status. Therefore, you're considered to be illegal immigrants. So you will all stay in this cell until your trails. Enjoy each other's
  • 10. company. Skienski left the cell and closed the door. The teenagers sat on the benches in silence until Shelly spoke up about a minute later. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Greg Dickinson Refugee Camp Analysis The conversation of meaning making is one of many sides. Is meaning automatically assigned to content upon its creation, or can meaning be made and negotiated by consumers? In order to further explore these questions, we can examine a hypothetical situation. If for example, a United States based production company distributes films to Yemeni refugee camps in order to take their minds off of their troubles and entertain them, some may be concerned that this is just an act of cultural imperialism on the part of the U.S.. Conversely, those on the other end may argue that refugees in Yemen are not lacking in agency, and can make meaning of the content themselves. As author Greg Dickinson explains, "...these audiences are more or less conscious of their position as audiences and, as such, make rational, conscious decisions about the arguments the rhetor makes." Essentially, the argument being made in this quote is one of agency. Rather than generalize entire populations of people as somewhat... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Those experiences then, inform the way that they perceive and interpret information. Thus, if we follow this logic, each of the individual people in our hypothetical refugee camp would most likely have a different understanding of the movies they are being shown. In other words, while it is possible that a person's individual identity may be influenced by content created by people outside of their in–group, it does not necessarily imply full blown imperialism and erasure of the native culture. Author NГ©stor GarcГa Canclini puts it this way: "...culture becomes a process of multinational assemblage, a flexible articulation of parts, a montage of features that any citizen in any country, of what whatever religion or ideology, can read and use." In a time in which we celebrate multiculturalism and diversity, it is important that we remember the role of media in our understanding of culture, as well as the individual's relationship with ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Mother In A Refugee Camp Suffering takes many forms explore this idea referring to three poems in detail and to at l east three poems drawn from your wider reading. The first thing you think when you are told the word suffering is torturing and death and yes this is a big aspect of the topic and it is included in the poem mother in a refugee camp by Chinua Achebe but there is also other parts of it that is not just physical but involves mental suffering and it is this section that is rarely associated with the word in question, Hide and seek by Vernon Scannell is a good example of how this piece comes into play. From this evidence we can explore different forms of suffering and by the time I have reached my conclusion we will have a better understanding of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... On the last stanza Duffy talks about a hundred agonies in black and white and it is said that black and white photographs are the most powerful and effective forms of capturing the moment of suffering. This poem has a very effective ending and it is going back to what I said at the start "From the aeroplane he stares impassively at where he earns his living and they do not care" and she is talking about the public and what they have all gone through to get these photographs all for maybe five or six that will be picked out to be published and used in tomorrows newspaper and yet when they read it as he says they do not care. This is not the only poem that has a really effective ending many of the poems have a really strong ending to put there point across, and to make the reader feel emotion towards the victim of suffering. Seamus Heaney's Mid term break has left a line all by itself to serve as the ending, Mid term Break is about an older brother who has come back to school to find that his younger brother has been hit by a car and it is about how the older brother reacts to this experience, this piece of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Other Side Of The Sky Essay Topics Living as a Refugee Refugee camps are places around the world where people who were forced out of their go and stay temporarily. The camps are not a nice resort or a place to have fun, they have worn down tents for people to stay and very low sanitation. In the book Other Side of the Sky Farah the main character escapes Afghanistan and later on stays at a refugee camp. In the refugee camps refugees live in tough conditions, Farah and her Mother have a hard time in the camps especially with her mother's problems, which many refugees also face. In the refugee camp Farah says "If I'm going to sink anyway what does it matter whether I think we sink quickly or slowly. You lose your drive (Ahmedi 123)." These camps have poor sanitation, are overly crowded, there are many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The refugees are highly impacted when they are sent to a refugee camp, refugees such as Farah. Refugee camps are run by the government, by world organizations, or the UN. The facilities are in very low condition. Refugee camps are for helping refugees that have fled their homeland for a chance at a safer place to live. The camps are for meeting their basic needs and trying to keep them more safe, but many small needs that are still important are not meet. The refugees usually sleep in tents with very few belongings. Some camps have washstand or areas where they can go to the bathroom and wash up (hygiene stations, WASH). There is a food distribution where a delivery will enter the camp and distribute food and drinking water to each family or group. The also mainly have security point and then like religious places and schools and shops ("Refugee Camp– Facilities"). They may seem like a very good and easy option to stay for refugees but they can lead to many problems and there are many risks.The camps are usually very over populated. There were around 407,477 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Theme Of A Mother In A Refugee Camp The poems 'A mother in a refugee camp' and 'Prayer Before Birth' emphasise the themes of growing up and loss of innocence through the impact of tragedy and man–made horrors. At the start of ' A mother in a Refugee Camp' the first words "No Madonna and child" provide us with a symbolic reference to Jesus and his Mother. Death is part of the natural circle of life, however a mother witnessing the death of her own child is unusual and seen as traumatic experience. This links to the traumatic life the child has lived in only his early stages of his innocent life. The mother gives her child a "ghost smile" this emphasises that her smile is an act of comfortless for her child, she is faking a smile as she has to face overwhelming sadness. As a child a ghost ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When a child grows up throughout its whole life a mother will carry round a smile of joy and pride on her face, however this child does not have the opportunity to grow into the adult he is meant to be. Similarly in the poem 'Prayer before birth' in the third stanza the poet asserts "Think me" and "Live me" this emphasises the fact that the unborn child is going to be used by society for evil purposes. Normally a child dreams about the life ahead of itself and can chose the life it wants to live. In spite of this poem the child is not even born and its future is already planned out. The child's innocence is reinforced when the narrator asserts "I am not yet born" The child shows innocence through child like language as "blood sucking bats" and "club footed ghouls" these are fears of a child the narrator brings forward, fears that normally a child would be to frightened of to even think about let alone discuss. The baby becomes more and more desperate, illustrated in the growing stanza length throughout the poem. as the world becomes more corrupted.the baby's final wish is to die if he wont be able to live a life with freedom when he asserts ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. A Mother In A Refugee Camp Poem Several poems in the anthology present the theme of futility. Explore this idea, referring to three poems in detail and at least three other poems from your wider reading. The idea of futility can be classified into a simple form or quality of being hopeless. Many poets like Vernon Scannell, 'Hide and Seek'; Carol Ann Duffy 'War Photographer' and Chinua Achebe, 'A Mother in a Refugee Camp' exploit the theme of futility to express their personal experience and ambiguity of the horrors of war and the terrible human loss that accompanies it. In 'War Photographer', the poet demonstrates the futility by detailing the inner conflict within a war photographer by exploring the suffering and devastation– both physically and emotionally– caused by the... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The use of the present participate verb form "humming" is a paradox to the ordinary daily routine. However, it also juxtaposes the mood and atmosphere felt in the refugee camp, because humming is associated with happiness and contentment. Consequently, these aren't the feelings felt by the mother, as she is devastated and heart broken that her child will soon die. However, In the beginning of the poem the tone is longing, as the mother knows her child's death will be soon. The tenor of futility and death towards the end is evident in the oxymoron "ghost–smile", and '"flowers" on the grave which exemplify the pain of the foreshadowing death. Furthermore, the employment of the pseudo–oxymoron "ghost smile" is indicative of her past life, which is now a ghost that haunts her. From the previous point, we can tell Achebe introduces feelings of futility and helplessness, allowing us, the readers, to acknowledge the sense of despair and grief as the mother is incapable of helping her child who is on the verge of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Compare Letter To A Young Refugee From Another By Nicholas... Refugees More than half the refugees around the globe are under the age of 18, even though children make up 31 percent of the world's population. Refugees are people who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disasters. The stories that will be covered in this essay are called "The Teacher Who Changed My Life," by Nicholas Gage and the second novel is "Letter to a YoungRefugee from Another," by Andrew Lam. These stories have many differences between each other but they both left their country to America. What if you had to flee your country? To begin with, Nicholas Gage retold his story in "The Teacher Who Changed My Life." Nicolas Gage was born in the village of Lia in Greece. After World War II, his mother and two sisters found themselves caught in Greece's civil war. Gage's mother, Eleni, was executed for making plans for her children from their village. Gage and his sisters joined their father in the United States. He met the person who changed the course of his life in America. Her name was Marjorie Hurd, "a salty–tongued, no–nonsense school teacher" (Gage212). Marjorie was a wise and trusted mentor. She taught Nicholas on how to put out a newspaper. "One day, Nicholas says, after discussing how writers should write about what they know, she assigned us to compose an essay from our own experience.Fixing me with a stern look, she added, "Nick, I want you to write about what happened to your family in Greece"(Gage215). ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. An Article On The Syrian Refugee Camp Aziz Abu Sarah wrote an article for National Geographic about her experiences in a Syrian refugee camp. Sarah focused on 5 things she had learned there. The first being the fact that not all refugees are counted for. Granted this article is from a few years ago and we now know the numbers are in the higher 5 million opposed to the 2 million Sarah states. Sarah then focused on how the bordering countries around Syria where many refugees have fled are in crisis themselves, which one of her main examples involving Lebanon from another source I will discuss later. Sarah's next point revolved around the neglect of the children's education there. Which we see an example of in Jodi Kantor and Catrin Einhorn's article "Refugees Encounter a New Word: Welcome", where kids coming fromrefugee camps are so behind on their education they have to be put into special schools where they can catch up. Sarah moved on to discuss her fourth point, on how some refugees are back in Syria, unable to get into another country. Sarah's final point discusses how these camps are the equivalent of prison, from how they treat you to what is like if you want to leave. Life in a refugee camp gives us the reasons states and other actors should be helping the displaced Syrians. To begin, not all Syrians are in as bad of a place as they could be. Beginning with CNN's video What Life is Like in a Syrian Refugee Camp Near a Russian Air Base, when asked why they do not go to Europe, even though it is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Refugee Camp Journey Many of the world's greatest leaders, thinkers, and minds, began with a humble beginning, however, through the law of nature and arbitrary, were given or acquired resources, which enabled them to achieve the impossible, unthinkable, and most importantly, the remarkable. I see this opportunity to assist Rustic Pathways in the Hill Tribe Support and Refugee Camp, as my first step, in my long journey towards greatness and success. Just as Leonardo Da Vinci's first introduction to the world of art, mechanics, and chemistry was through his apprenticeship in Andrea Del Verrocchio's workshop, so too, can Rustic Pathways serve as my introduction to the world of humanitarian work and aid. Growing up, my teachers and professors did not simply refer to my classmates and I, as "students" but rather, as "the future." Being referred to as,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As a child, I would always hear and read statistics on Hispanic–Americans, not finishing high school, high dropout rates, high crime rates, low percentage pursuing a college degree, and even less receiving one. I resented certain statistics and reports because I was a child, and did not understand the reality that many people in community face. So, as I began to grow up, I began to see people that I considered brothers and sisters, fall through the cracks, not finish high school, become victim to the adversity, and simply adhere to a life, that was not meant for them. Because I am witness to the lack of resources, and exposure in the Hispanic community, I intend to provide them exactly that. I will invest in my community, by one day creating a community outreach program that will help instill the value of an education, create workshops, and foster creativity and progress. Whether my outreach program makes a difference in the the city limits of Houston, Texas, or in the isolated regions of the Tibetan Plateau, I consider the world my community, and therefore, aim to change it for the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. The Growing Up Of A Refugee Camp Moving to America was the biggest change in my life. Before, I know very little of this world and my thoughts and opinion were very narrow. I did not have the best education and I think little about my future since I lived in a refugee camp. I also could not open myself up to people of different background because of the lack of diversity while living in the camp. But moving to America I was introduced with a new culture, education, and diversity that changes my life and my views. Before I moved to America I lived in a Thailand refugee camp called Mae La. Growing up in Mae La camp there was not a lot of diversity since most people who live there were Karen people. All my neighbor were Karen, therefore I was not close to people of different background or people with different ethnicity. I could not open up to them easily since I only speak Karen language. I was more comfortable with the Karen people too since I know mostly Karen people and my school was full of Karen kids. I went to a mission school in Mae la and the school in Mae La refugee camp was not well made like the one in US, it was made of bamboo and there was no floor. Mae La also have a poor education system so many Karen student including myself did not get a full advance education like the one in America. Since I was still a kid when I lived in Mae La camp, I did not know about the struggle of living in refugee camp. One day I come home from school and my family told me that we were moving to America. I could not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Refugee Camp Narrative Last year, I was volunteering with the children at the Morris Area Elementary School, a volunteer asked me where I was from. I answered her that I was from St. Paul, Minnesota. Then she went and asked why I have an accent. At this point, I knew the answer that she was looking for; her intention was to ask where I was REALLY from. So where was I really from? I was born and raised in arefugee camp in Thailand. Now, I am not Thai either, I just happened to be born in that country. As a Hmong in the refugee camp, I had to learn Thai as my second language and trust me, finding a good education there was not easy. Why myfamily used to live in a refugee camp? Long story short, all the Hmong victims during the Vietnam War supposed to live in a refugee ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Refugee Camp Budgets 4.1 Funding and Budgets Environmental funding is the integral part of the special funding. Funding should be flexible so re–allocation to different sub–activities according to requirements. Cost analysis is at the refugee operation camp it helps to donors for environmental activity. The relativecosts of immediate versus delayed funding of environmental management activities may be attract to the donors and they try to provide more fund and support to operation. This approach is opposed by the many donor who are under pressure and they are attached in this program. The environmental budget covers the emergency phase which include process and practicalities. This two main area is needed for the emergency phase. Cost–benefit analyses limited ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Monitoring and seeking to influence policies affecting the environment in a refugee situation may be more cost–effective for an environmental agency than direct implementation of field activities. The greatest impacts on the environment in refuge situations may be caused by policy decisions relating to, amongst other things, camp siting, layout and size. National environmental policies are not possible to refer to refugee–affected areas, but can be improved with basic of guidelines to create a supportive policy framework. Most countries have National Environmental Action Plans or similar strategies for environmental ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Thailand Refugee Camp Analysis Planting now could possibly needs your best effort; you will harvest later. Hard work always pay off in the end. And how you are raised considerably determined how you'll eventually be in the future, whether in life or in the career field. If we believe everyday work to be mindless, then that will affect the work we will create in the future. With an intention of being resourceful and innovative, I believe that one will be more successful growing up in a society which believes that getting higher education is the key to happiness and success. The rural side of Thailand, Refugee camp is where i grew up, home of thousands uneducated refugees. There were hundreds of other kids who do not take school seriously because the camp is isolated from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... she stopped going to school because at that time there was no school in refugee camp. However, she always encourage, motivate me and my sisters to focus in school so that we don't have to work under a bad condition. My freshman year was academically bumpy, but then I started to realize that the schools here in The United States are much harder than my former school in Thailand. I did not understand the lectures so eventually, I was behind the lessons. I felt like giving up because It was difficult when I know very little English. My teacher called my mother because I was behind in the class. One day, she called me into her room. "your teacher called today. I know it is hard for you but I want you to excel academically and live in a better life than me and your father. Please, do not give up on school and try harder. I know you can accomplish this road", said my mom with a smile on her face and the gave me a hug. That night, I gave a thought to what she said and decided to try harder than I used to back in Thailand because I gradually began to see education as a means of fulfillment and as a path toward making a living better than life in Thailand. Today I am very close to earning ahigh school diploma. Getting a high school diploma is not as easy as it seems but indeed putting effort, hard work and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Refugees In Camps During The Refugee Crisis During the refugee crisis there was some international governmental and non–governmental aid for the refugees in the country still those 350 000 – 400 000 (vidi pogore) were enormous burden for Macedonian economy. That was third reason for accommodating refugees in camps instead incorporating them in the society. Their potential influence on Macedonians economy and establishing refugees' camps can be observed thru the possible impact on local and national economy. Because these two factors are very closely connected they will be elaborated and overviewed simultaneously. Refugees escaping from ethnic cleansing were arriving in Macedonia only with few necessities, and were relaying on Aid from host nation. In that time the biggest economy issue for Macedonian government was unemployment, statistic said that around 32% of the population was unemployed, or around 350 000 people. So people in order to survive were working on black market, and without insurance. At some level that was tolerated from the government because it was providing existence for people and social peace in the country. Black market and working without insurance had a big influence for local and national economy. Major concern for government if refugees were incorporated into the society was that these 350 000 – 400 000 refugees, in conditions of no income was more than possible that they would seek for job in the country on black market. Also around 50 000–60 000 refugees were accommodated mostly in families ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Life In A Refugee Camp Analysis In 1942 millions of Jews lost their lives to Hitler's forces.The world waited to take action. In 2015, the world is still waiting to take action and is repeating the same mistake that they made 73 years ago. The world has not learned from the events of the Holocaust because Syrian refugees don't have what they need to live, innocent people are dying, and the crisis is getting bigger. They don't know that they are killing many of people who have made a difference in this world and they need to stop because,they are taking good people out of this world and bringing in bad. We need to take action and quit being afraid and not make this Holocaust 2. The world has not learned its lesson because the Syrian refugees are not living comfortably, and they don't have enough supplies to live on. First of all food is becoming very low. In the video "Life in a Refugee Camp" it states that the refugees get only thirteen dollars a month for food. Safe shelter is not being applied to the refugees,while in the refugee camps. They have to rent the tents for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the video "Tying the Holocaust to the Syrian Crisis" it states " The U.S was always big in talk but we wouldn't help them." said by one of the Holocaust Survivors. Also in the same video it says " Barack Obama should have got involved earlier." The world didn't notice until a young boy washed up on shore because of no help from the U.S. So it takes the loss of a young life to notice that this situation is becoming a crisis that we all need to know about and take action. The groups are putting fear into many peoples lives and this inter war needs to come to an end at some point and that point is now.You can tell that the U.S doesn'twant to stand up because they are afraid they the U.S would get brought into this battle but we already have because we brought in Syrian refugees. Fear isn't going to save us but action ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Causes Of Syrian Refugees In Paris, France, one cannot walk the streets without seeing men, women and children lined up on sidewalks, sitting on old mattresses or cardboard boxes, and begging for money. They are Syrian refugees. They have signs in French and Arabic saying "Syrian Refugee" or something like "pregnant and nowhere to go." To many Americans, the sight of families, especially children, begging for money on the street is quite rare and unsettling. You can see these refugees all over the major tourist attractions in Paris, whether while walking down the Champs Г‰lysГ©e or noticing them sleeping under Paris's famed bridges. In 2015 former French President Francois Hollande declared that France will welcome 30,000 refugees over the following two years and invest 50 million euros to support housing for refugees, an act which he believed to be France's "humanitarian duty." 2015 was the year in which Europe experienced its highest influx of refugees since World War II. Of these refugees 337,509 Syrians were seeking refuge or asylum in France. Today, thousands of refugees line the streets as described above. Despite successfully leaving their home country of Syria to escape the severe slaughter and violence of the Assad regime and terrorist groups, refugees in France still face extreme hardship, as many are left on the streets with no help and no safe place for their families to sleep at night. Waiting for asylum, the Syrian refugees live in squalor, moving from one public place to the next just ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Culture, Cultures And Traditions In Refugee Camp Cultures and Traditions in Refugee Camp I experienced many different cultures, ethnicities and traditions when my family lived in Thailand. We lived in a Refugee camp and it was not like an America society. Every month, a volunteer group from a big city would aid every family in the refugee camp with bags of rice depending on how many people are in your family. There were about ten schools in the camp which were public schools and Catholic schools. Schools and houses were built out of bamboo and trees, and the buildings don't last more than a decade. Life was not easy in Thailand. Not every parent had a job and they found other ways to make money to provide for their families. There were many cultures and different ethnicities living in the same area and our neighbors spoke different languages and they were from different ethnic groups. There are many holidays and cultural traditions that we celebrate every year by dancing, playing music, and having big festivals. The majority of families in the camp had chickens, pigs, or other useful animals that help with everyday life. We had a garden in our backyard with fruits, vegetables, and other types of eatable plants. There were banana trees, mangos, jackfruits, peppers, papaya, sugar cane and star fruit trees. Our houses were built with bamboo and the rooftops were covered with hay. A lot of houses were on hills because the camp was not a flat place. We had no electricity or water lines connected to our home. Houses were built ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Refugee Camp Narrative I am 23 years old. I am Karen. I was born in Thailand refugee camp. All of my siblings and my parents were born in Burma or Myanmar. Due to political issue and war between Karen and Burmese, my family moved to Thailand refugee camp. Both of my parents had no education background and were farmers. I have four brothers and two sisters. When I was around 6 and 7, I experienced the most fearful event that unforgettable. The Burmese soldiers came to refugee camp in Thailand and burned our camp and killed people. I heard the gun shots and bombing sounds. I saw my house burning. I was scared until I pee. I was crying and my mom closed my mouth so that the soldiers' can't hear my voice. I lived in Thailand refugee camp for 16 years. One thing I learned... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I used to volunteer at church and taking care of the children. I love being around with them, doing fun activities with them, provide the food for them, and teach them how to speak Karen language. My favorite subject is science. I like biology because I always learn new things during lecture and lab. I dislike math even I'm good at math. I like to watch movie or play volleyball when I have free time. For me, success means accomplish my goals and live a happy life as I wanted to be. My family and my experiences motivate me to not give up on my career and reach my goal. After taking gerontology classes, I am thinking of minoring in Gerontology. I did service learning in St. Benedict Nursing home. I volunteered there for 22 hours and I loved it. It was the best experience I've ever done. I want to have a career that I love to do and don't have to force myself to do it. If I get to do the thing that I love to do, I'm pretty sure that I will happy with my job. However, there are some areas that I would like to improve such as communication, and talking in front of class. My English is not very good because English is my forth language that I learned. My biggest fears about choosing a career is that I fear that cannot achieve my goal and a major that I chose doesn't suit ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Research Paper On Refugees Imagine this... Waking up everyday in a cold tin shed, a storage shed or an abandoned chicken coop. No windows. Limited running water. Clothing as blankets and pillows. No heating. Everyone in the same boat. Everyone struggling for safety. Everyone hoping for peace. Imagine having no choice but to find shelter wherever it may be available for the night. This is the global refugee crisis. According to Dictionary.com, the refugee crisis refers to the movements of large groups of displaced people. Displaced meaning they have left their home, their live, their family and friends behind. Here are the facts: 65 million people are displaced from their homes by violence and war each year. If that was a country, that would be the 21st largest country in the world! 40 million of those people, stay within their own home country, but 25 million are refugees in camps in safer countries. This means they cross a border into a neighboring state or country in order to find safety and flea the ongoing wars. Most of them are living in poor countries. In Damascus and Aleppo one in four people are refugees. That is the equivalent of Auckland, Christchurch, Wellington and Hamilton being upheaved. The UNHCR estimate only 10% of about 490,000 Syrians find shelter in a refugee camp. Refugees stay for a long time in camps. The average length of displacement is 10 years. The world's largest refugee camp, in eastern Kenya, called Dadaab was built in 1991 as a "temporary camp" set up for temporary ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Substandard Living Conditions Essay How Does the Issue of substandard Living Conditions Challenge the International Community and What are Some Possible Solutions to This Problem? Bay Shore High School Nora Sacco International Relations and United Nations Mr. NiedЕєwiecki May 30 2017 Every day, the international community is confronted by plethora of problems. Although these challenges may vary in scope and severity, they affect enough people worldwide to warrant international attention. The difficult issue of lack of sanitation and substandard living conditions in refugee camps is one such troubling challenge. The creation of solutions for this important issue is only possible ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Living conditions and sanitation and refugee camps are the main problems that almost every refugee camp has to go through. There are so many refugees and so little supplies, workers, and living space so it makes it very hard for camps to try to have enough supplies and keep their camps clean. A refugee camp is a temporary home to help people to get back on their feet, but these camps are having so many problems that they are making it harder for refugees to get back on their feet. The camp 's main problem is lack of sanitation, people are coming to these camps and getting sick because the camps are so dirty. The next main issue is a lack of supplies, people are coming to these camps in need of water, food, and living space and some of these camps can not even provide these new campers with the supplies because they already have so many people that they have to provide for. The current situation is unacceptable, as the Syrian war, lack of supplies and the western world's indifference to blight of the refugees has caused many refugee camps to become uncleanly and over populated. The current situation in many camps and other people have come up with many techniques to cope with the struggles. The camps have come up with my techniques to solve the problem that are not enough supplies, food, sanitation, and not enough room in the camp for each refugee. The camps in this day and age still has many issues that they had back then, but the problems are less ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Refugee Settlement As A Refugee Camp The displaced populaces in camps are provided with help and security as a feature of the UNHCR's command and as a partner with the host government to keep them amassed in one region(Kobia and Cranfield, 2009). There is always a distinction between urban refugees and camp dwellers when analyzing the situation.There is also the dilemma of whether to consider establishments such as detention centers or collective settlements as refugee camps or not.The characteristics of judging or analyzing a camp to be opened , closed ,semi opened or non existing at all, is also an important factor to put in mind.The refugees development of their new urban context , their daily movements and their experience within the space, is what might lead us to comparing a refugee settlement as any urban settlement, rather than a temporary solution (Dora М€Д±,2010). 2.4.2 The understanding of a refugee camp. For one to understand the base of camp establishments , One of the key factors is the topic of how the governmental issues of character converge with the legislative issues of space.Camps far and wide contrast extraordinarily, and the purposes behind their dissimilarities are to be found in the ways that the legislative issues of asylum meet with the governmental issues of their basic rights of returning or resettling as verbalized by outcast populaces(Sanyal, R., 2014). When analyzing the refugee camp as a form of a city , There are the issues of community organization ,scale and their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Similarities Between Refugee And Mother In A Refugee Camp To understand the two poems, their similarities, their differences and both their anti–war messages, one must really study the poems in depth, as both poems have a deep, unfathomable significance behind them. Both Poems look at the bitter hardships in war–stricken areas of the world as Chinua Achebe's "Mother in a refugee camp" focuses on Biafra, Nigeria and Carol Ann Duffy's (no specified location) far from "(Rural) England" emphasizing that most of us –the audience– don't actually experience any of this. Yet the two poems highlight the negative effects war has on humanity as they bring the reader into a third person perspective of two first person victims of war. The photographer, although he is just a psychological victim (passive victim) of the war, he is still deeply affected. We see this when the poem comments on his emotion "from the airplane he stares impassibly" showing how the war has made him lose spirit. In "Mother in a Refugee Camp" the mental effect of war has been taken to a much more extreme level. The mother, whose child has died from starvation (a much more mentally wrecking experience) sits there holding a "ghost smile between her teeth" thinking of all those memories of a proud mother she once had been. This must be... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In what state of mind must a mother be? To ignore the death wish of her child? This is one of the many questions that the poems raises but leaves unanswered, creating a mental resonance of the thoughts and feelings one might have after finishing the poem. Very ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Thailand Refugee Camp I was born in Burma. My family had to flee to a Thailand refugee camp because our village was attacked. In the camp we were safer than before, but we had limited opportunities with education. Several times throughout the months, our teacher would simply not show up for school. Those days all we can do is sit and wait. Punishment in school was difficult. Our teachers would hit us on the arms or thighs with a 6 to 7 inch long, thick bamboo stick. We would be chastised in public, for example, teachers making us touch dirty toilets, or verbally reprimanding us in front of the whole school, rather than teaching us what is correct and incorrect. It was an unsanitary and unstable learning environment. We did not know these were bad circumstances ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Essay about Chechen Refugee Camps and Education Chechen Refugee Camps and Education 620/ PSYCH April 14, 2014 Dr. Neysa Hatcher Chechen Refugee Camps and Education The creation of schools is one of the leading ways to produce hope and stability in refugee camps. Many would love to go to school because, currently they have no other option, but to teach themselves. Refugees can recall having great memories of their past school experiences, which they use as motivation to continue to learn. On account of my involvement with a refugee relief organization, I have been assigned the job of creating schools in the Chechen refugee camps of Chechnya. The primary means of survival and daily focus for these refugees have been through humanitarian aid. That assistance is made ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The development of an education system in the refugee camps is an impressive yet intimidating task. For that reason, the three things that I would like to understand before obligating me to this project are: 1) How long are the refugee camps offered as a necessary placement for the Chechens to be located in, 2) How and when can I start compiling data on the education levels of all the refugees within the camp on the different subjects of reading, writing and math, 3) How would I start to find out the mental health problems of those due to the traumatic change in environment and lose of identity, 4) I would have to find suitable teachers, buildings, and who will be funding the program. Hopefully, there are suitable buildings because this will be another expense we would have to look at for funding purposes. Having a psychologist within the school would also help tremendously because many students need the counseling. All of these items are needed in order to get things in order for the start of the project. Of course, there will be other things that I would like to better understand, but those will come up in the progress of the work. Ethnocentric Challenges That May Arise When Planning the Project There have been ongoing and unresolved issues among the Russians and Chechens for many years. According to DeWaal (2002), "Russians believe that Islam has maintained a stronghold in Chechnya communities for many years"(p.1). The fighting has coerced Chechens ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Mother In A Refugee Camp And Prayer Before Death Human suffering is a poignant part of life and takes many forms. Explore this idea, referring to three poems in detail and to at least three other poems drawn from your wider reading. Human suffering is feeling pain, distress or hardship in life. The three poems chosen all share the definition of human suffering. While reading the poems War Photographer, Mother in a Refugee Camp and Prayer Before birth it clearly shows how the horrors of war are the most magnified of human suffering. Each poem is reflecting a form of suffering that was created due to the violence of war. Carol Ann Duffy reflects the life of a war photographer developing his pictures, showing the pain he faces from looking back at the photos. A Mother in a Refugee Camp was... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "No Madonna and child could touch her tenderness for a son''. "Madonna" represents Virgin Mary and "child" represents Christ. Chinua Achebe is implying that the mother in the poem loves her son more than Mary loved Jesus Christ; this shows how strong the bond between the mother and her son is. In the Catholic Church it is believed than Mary watched Jesus die and her prayer did not help him. This may be the reason why Achebe chose this metaphor to describe what the mother is going through as her prayer also did not help her son. Throughout the poem the reader can see that during the course of the death of the son the mother is praying for him to be okay. "Rubbed him down with bare palms." Because palms are usually used to pray, it reminds the reader that the mother is praying to try and save her son's life. Visual imagery was used to represent the predictable death of the son in line fifteen: "the rust colored hair left on his skull". The adjective" rust colored" shows that the son has been dying for a while. Achebe also uses olfactory imagery to further describe the conditions of the refugee camp. "The air was heavy with odors of diarrhea", this shows the unhygienic conditions of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. The Afghan Girl By Stephen Mcmurry Violence and warfare around the globe are responsible for the displacement of large quantities of individuals from their homes and communities, destroying their quality of life. Areas for displaced peoples, also known as refugee camps, lack the necessary resources and funding to support the large communities of those fleeing violence. The poor standard of living due to the lack of resources cause malnutrition, illness, and often death. Certain difficulties, such as lack of fresh water or medicine, become a daily reality for the residents while in a camp. Since the development of more portable cameras in the twentieth century, photojournalistic images of individual refugees have been captured to provide more than just a photograph, but tell... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Her eyes are wide, bright, and almost fearful. The slight anger in her facial expression, possibly towards those that displaced her, is overpowered by a sad and longing look. This sorrow is evident in her eye–catching stare, expressing the story of the hardships that she has already faced at the young age of twelve. Despite the troubled countenance within her gaze, a glimmer of hope is evident. As previously stated, this photograph does more than just capture a surface level portrait of a twelve–year–old Afghan refugee. It provides crucial insight into the substandard conditions these people endure. Roland Barthes views images in this way by analyzing beyond surface observations, and seeing the message beneath the picture, or in this case, the girl's facial expression. "Camera Lucida" is about examining photographs as an expression of something beyond the image that describes an event or happening, viewing the story within. A great photograph recreates a moment that can never appear exactly the same again, evoking adventure and question as to what has happened (Barthes, 19). If the image can tell its own story through the depictions present in the image without any words, then it is one worth remembering. The Afghan Girl tells its own story, a story of hardship and pain. The viewer of the image initially sees a Muslim girl with incredibly beautiful eyes, but upon further inspection the image begins to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. The Late Homecomer Analysis In The Late Homecomer, we follow a family of Hmong people through their many hardships and the eventual struggle to become Americans. A young Kao, her sister Dawb, her mother, father, and grandmother manage to preserve through everything thrown at them by relying on family, a theme evident throughout the novel. Love, however is what helps them prevail though the trials they face as a family and a people and is what becomes an understated, but reoccurring theme in the novel, The Late Homecomer. When assigned with choosing a favorite passage, one quote immediately came to mind. It can be found towards the bottom of the page 199and reads, "I wrote about the love I felt I knew: Love is the reason why my mother and father stick together in a hard life when they might each have an easier one apart; love is the reason why you choose a life with someone, and you don't turn back although your heart cries sometimes and your children see you cry and you wish out loud that things were easier. Love is getting up each day and fighting the same fight only to sleep that night in the same bed beside the same person because long ago, when you were younger and you did not see so clearly, you had chosen them." I first read this passage as a part of the assigned reading. But I re–read, and re–read, and re–read this passage because it spoke to me more than any other in the book. I found it to be simple, but beautiful, and extremely precise. Kao felt she had no personal experience with love but ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Refugee Crisis Reflection I learned of the movement by reading about the refugee crisis online. Another way I learned about the movement was seeing news coverage surrounding the refugee crisis and people boarding boats in treacherous waters desperately trying to escape their home countries. Media and other forms of representation played an essential role in covering the refugee crisis movement. Depending on the news outlet I often saw how different political ideologies infiltrated the facts about the movement. From my viewpoint I believe that there is a target market for the campaign. The movement seems to be appealing to a wide range of groups. The campaign appeals to most age groups, it calls for people to get involved for all different ages. There seems to be one geographical region that has been particular called upon to help the movement. The geographical region that seems to be targeted the most is countries in the Mediterranean area. This seems to be true because that area is a central location that many of the refugees have some, but difficult time accessing. I feel as if the movement is asking me to do several things. For instances, the movement is asking me to lay down prior prejudices I may have had and to be more empathetic to the human suffering that is taking place in the refugee crisis. Another thing that I feel that the movement is asking me to do is to have "open arms" to refugees in whatever compacity that I am able. I have partially been able to do what the movement is asking me to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Refugee Women During the 21st Century Essay Refugee Women During the 21st Century Refugees face governmental turmoil, political prosecution and natural disasters; however, women are further burdened by their female status, biological functions and lack of attention to the needs of women in refugee camps. Refugee women sustain emotional and often physical scars attempting to escape from oppressive situations. They are forced to leave, face death or perhaps something worse. They may find these horrors anyway, but they will risk that unknown for a chance at a different life. The first stop on this arduous journey is often a refugee camp. Here, if they are lucky, they are provided with basic needs such as food and shelter. During a presentation by the International Rescue ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Women should be given the chance to start over without the additional burden of a full womb. After these women and children are uprooted, they are often forced to deal with the dreadful possibility of experiencing abuse, rape, childbirth and protecting children, often without the assistance of a partner. These hardships are doubtfully given the attention and resources needed as noted by the lack of security in refugee camps. It is not an easy journey for boys or men either, but it must be extraordinarily difficult for a young girl experiencing her period for the first time while fighting off a perverse stranger in a refugee barracks or recovering from a rape only to discover there is a pregnancy to deal with. Such realities must cause such distress as to make a woman feel hopeless and perhaps invite death as a less frightening option. It is sad that the plight of these women does not stop at new borders. In the case of refugee women, even if they are luck enough to reach a host country they often find themselves begging for asylum. They are likely forced to give details of experiences they have had and may hesitate to be completely open about the terror that awaits them if they are forced to return home. When immigrant and refugee women find themselves starting over in a new country, such as the United States, they may meet with limits on ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Personal Statement For A Student 's Entry From A Muslim /... Every time a new family comes into the guidance department there should always be a meeting accessing all needs before the student's entry to the school. When I receive notification of a student arriving from a Muslim/Iraq refugee camp I will set up a plan to ensure that the student and family feel at ease when arriving into a new school environment. Before preparing this plan, I would do my own research on the student's background, culture, and community. Simple knowledge of this will allow for less assumptions and generalizations. In order to establish a well–organized meeting I would prepare all documents that are needed for the family to fill out. The guidance office already has the forms translated so it is just a matter of gathering the forms in the language needed. After gathering all the forms the next step would be finding a translator to explain the documents to the family as well as translate for myself since I will not be speaking their language. To find a translator in the school I would send out an email notification asking all faculty and staff if they know the language. If that ends up not working out I would contact the International Red Cross relocation effort and talk to them to see if a translator can be present for the meeting with the family. Once the paperwork documents and translator are ready for the family I will set up a meeting. First, I believe it is important to connect and have a conversation with the family. Having the family explain their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. Kakuma Refugee Camp Analysis The long Journey that transformed my life. Thousands of South Sudanese refugees that were displaced by war have been living in the Kenyan, Kakuma refugee camp since early 1990s. I was there since August 1992. But after I finished my high school in November 11, 2003, a South Sudanese friend who came earlier to Australia in the same year sent me a humanitarian application form. I filled that application and within a month I received the fill number. But, I had to wait for almost a year to be scheduled for an interview. Hence, in late 2004, my name was listed on the notification boards in kakuma refugee camp. That notice board was to be near to what we used to called zone three market/shopping centre or equivalent to the malls here in Australia. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Throughout the night before the interview day, my heart rate beats was faster than normal. I did not know what was going to ensue. I was overwhelmed with both nervousness and joy. I was inquisitive about what kind of questions I could be asked as I did not know the interviewer. Those were queries still playing on my head. It was common that time you might get accepted or rejected. Both possibilities were illustrious. But, in anyway, I had to wait until I know exactly which way to go on the interview day. I presented myself to the IOM multifaceted site on interview day. Suddenly, after I spent 10–15 minutes of the interview, I was told that I had passed the interview. It came into my mind that my life had changed for the better. To my attentive, it seemed that everything was prepared for me. I started to see myself entering into the lists of rich people. Everyone used to believe that whoever came to the West or living in the western world are all rich people. Even before an approval letter or travel document to Australia was given, it was virtually sounded that I had been given the ticket to a dreamland. I could party and sung few songs that I knew. I and my friends travelled within/between zones ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 41. The Life Of A Refugee Camp Life is like a drop of water floating on the surface of the lotus leaf. I cannot trust it when people claim that life can't be changed because of my own life story. How could anyone believe that I was born in a refugee camp? As a matter of fact, I was born there. In the early 1990's one of the smallest countries in the world, Bhutan was politically active because of growing communism within the nation. At that time, the country was populated with Nepali and Drukpas; two distinct groups of people. One group eats beef for their finest food and the other group prays to cows as a god. For hundreds of years these two groups cooperated with each other and had a good relationship. Then that relationship changed when the Bhutanese people ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... My parents were among this group. For the next eighteen years of their lives, they remained refugees until the United States of America legally brought us here to Virginia. Looking back, I can't even imagine how I spent my life back in the refugee camp in Nepal. It was not only a hard life, but an impossible one. There were various problems in the refugee camp like scarcity of basic needs and the unavailability of better education. In the refugee camp, basic needs such as food, clothes, and shelter were hard to find. My family had to depend on small biweekly rations. Sometimes we ran out of rations and had to starve the rest of the week. With scarce nutritious food, it was impossible to manage a good diet and, as a result, it was hard to maintain good health. Clothing was another problem in the refugee camp. We did not have warm jackets and coats to keep ourselves safe from the cold during the harsh Nepali winters. The price of clothing was very high. Since we did not have money, buying them was not an option. Each year, many people died in the camp as a result. People also turned to suicide as a way to end their suffering. When people want for something and continue to not get it, then they become more frustrated with each passing day. They begin to no longer see the value of life. As a result, they take their life making a statement that dying was better than living in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...