Christmas
Plea to World From Father of Drowned Syrian Child:
Open Your Doors
'Hopefully next year the war will end in Syria and
peace will reign all over the world.'
By Andrea Germanos
December
25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Common
Dreams"
- The father of the three-year-old Syrian boy whose
lifeless body
washed up on a beach in Turkey—the powerful
photo of which captured the human tragedy of the
refugee crisis—will deliver a Christmas message in
which he urges the world to have sympathy for those
fleeing the ravages of war.
Abdullah
Kurdi, who, in addition to losing three-year-old
Alan, also lost his wife, Rehanna and five-year-old
son Ghalib when the boat bound for Greece they were
on capsized, will deliver the remarks in this year’s
alternative Christmas message on the UK’s Channel 4.
An excerpt of the message and
transcript have already been released.
“We Syrians
leave our country due to war. We all are afraid for
our children, for our honor,” Kurdi says.
“I want to
help children because they know nothing about life
except for laughing and playing. That’s all they
know. So it’s a problem for children if we don’t
look after them and take care of them.”
“My
message,” Kurdi adds, “is I’d like the whole world
to open its doors to Syrians.
“At this
time of year I would like to ask you all to think
about the pain of fathers, mothers and children who
are seeking peace and security.”
He adds,
“We ask just for a little bit of sympathy from you,”
and ends by saying, “Hopefully next year the war
will end in Syria and peace will reign all over the
world.”
The war in
Syria has already
uprooted more than 4 million people, and the
International Organization for Migrations said this
week that the number of fatalities of refugees or
migrants just off Greece or Turkey this year has
surpassed 700, including children and babies. In the
latest such tragedy, at least 18 migrants
drowned Thursday when their boat headed to the
Greece sank.
António
Guterres, outgoing head of the UN Refugee Agency,
warned this week, “If the conflict does not end
quickly, this might be the end of Syria as we know
it.”
Channel 4
has broadcast an annual alternative to the Queen’s
Christmas Day address to the UK since 1993. Last
year’s was given by British Ebola survivor William
Pooley, who
said, “Christmas should focus our minds on our
kinship with people in all corners of the globe. We
are all brothers and sisters. I’m sure we would all
help a brother or sister in need.”
The message
in 2013 was given by NSA whistleblower Edward
Snowden, who
said that “a child born today will grow up with
no conception of privacy at all,” and that the kinds
of surveillance outlined in Orwell’s Nineteen
Eighty-Four “are nothing compared to what we have
available today.” |