Collapsed buildings in Aleppo (AFP or licensors)
By Linda Bordoni and Tomasz Matyka, SJ
Feb 10 2023
Jesuit Refugee Service Syria was already accompanying the long-suffering people in war-ravaged northern Syria before the earthquake, providing basic services and spiritual closeness. As it faces the current dramatic emergency, the JRS team appeals for support and prayers.
More than 1,600 people have been reported dead so far in northern Syria following Monday’s earthquake. Search and rescue operations are ongoing in the area where people are still trapped under the rubble of destroyed or damaged buildings.
The region, which is ravaged by continuing conflict between the government, Kurdish-led forces and rebel groups is home to millions of refugees displaced by the civil war.
Even before the earthquake, the situation in much of the region was critical, with freezing weather, crumbling infrastructure and widespread poverty.
War-torn Aleppo is one of the cities most devastated by the deadly earthquake.
Speaking from Aleppo, the Director of Jesuit Refugee Service Syria, told Vatican Radio that sustaining life and health is the immediate priority, as the JRS team seeks to reopen essential health clinics.
Jesuit Fr. Tony O’Riordan, also spoke about the work JRS is doing to provide basic protection against the cold and aid for people who are unable to return home. “Helping people remain resilient mentally,” he added, is also crucial in the long-suffering region and in particular, at this moment in time.
Fr. O’Riordan recalled how the situation in Syria – and in Aleppo – had deteriorated over the course of 2022, plunging people into poverty, hunger, fuel poverty, and with a very degraded health system. All of this “causing great hardship over the winter.”
In eastern Aleppo, he added, “the area affected most by the war, the infrastructure and buildings were very devastated” even before the earthquake on Monday.
After the earthquake, right across the city, many more buildings have collapsed and others are unsafe, he said.
Fr. O’Riordan said he’s been listening to people “as they describe those dreadful moments of the first and second earthquakes: the first one coming in the hours of darkness and that sense of terror and their concern for their families in the darkness, not knowing what was happening, waking up, discovering what was happening and just not knowing what their situation was.”
Scores of people have perished he said, and “the thousands that have managed to survive are left very fearful.”
The importance of spiritual closeness
So, the JRS director continued, one of the key ways that JRS seeks to respond “is giving people a listening ear, to allow God’s spirit to enter into the trauma and terror with compassion.”
He said he has already seen some of the fruits of this closeness but, he commented, “it will take even longer and more conversations for them to have a greater sense of security.”