Father and son scavenge to feed family
Father and son scavenge to feed family
IZMIR, Turkey – A man and a boy crawl into a garbage bin. They are collecting cartons, plastic and cans to sell to help feed their family.
The brutally tiring work starts just after dawn and often goes on almost to dusk. Even just walking the route of more than 10 kilometres is tiring.
The man is Firaz and the boy is Uday, his seven-year-old son. Firaz, 25, is missing part of his arm and three fingers on the other hand. He lost them in industrial accidents when he was a boy.
After bombs destroyed his house in Syria, he fled to Turkey with his family eight months ago and they now live in Izmir.
Firaz received a disability pension in Syria, before the war. Now he has no choice and must work, and he accepts his fate willingly. “This is my future – hard work to feed my kids. This reality is my future.”
Every day he takes what he gathers to a collection point. He is provided with a trolley and he trudges back, hauling a load of up to 100 kilograms, his left upper arm hooked over one handle, his injured right hand awkwardly clutching the other.
“This is my future – hard work to feed my kids.”
For this backbreaking work he receives the equivalent of five or six dollars a day. Sympathetic Turkish passers-by frequently give him small donations.
Uday sometimes misses out on school, which he attends, for the odd day or two to help out his father. He climbs deep into the bins to reach bottles and cans at the bottom.
The boy does not begrudge the work, even if he admits it is sometimes exhausting. “I want to work with my father because both his hands are cut off.”
Home is a refuge for Firaz, although the rent takes almost all his income some months. There, he retreats to eat, sleep and be with his wife Amina, his daughters and Uday. When he plays with the children, his face breaks into a smile. However, the place is bare, with just a few blankets, a rug and mattresses. With barely enough money for the rent, there is little left for heat and the winter was cold.
Firaz has been identified as vulnerable by ASAM, the Turkish NGO that works with UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency. UNHCR has helped him with vouchers, clothes and blankets. Officials say more funding and more help for refugees are needed.
“I try to teach them what I know, verses from the Koran, counting up to 10.”
The children are young and Amina sees her role as one of encouraging them to be optimistic.
“Of course we give them hope, encourage them to be educated,” she said. “All parents are hoping for the best education for their kids. I studied until the sixth grade and I try to teach them what I know, verses from the Koran, counting up to ten. That’s what I can do, because that’s what I know.”
More help is on the way. The UNHCR office in Izmir will be working with Turkish officials to lessen the economic burden on the family. Firaz is both grateful and embarrassed.
“If I wasn’t disabled, if I had my arms, I would work hard and make money and I wouldn’t accept any help from others,” he said.