"It's been 10 years since the last time I was happy. After the death of my husband I don't remember being happy anymore. After he died I took on such a lot of responsibility, trying to make sure the family is happy. Now we have to adapt to what we have,” says Samira, a refugee from Syria (Oxfam). The incessant struggles that a refugee faces becomes custom-- a never ending loop of dismay which causes sadness to be their most prominent emotion. Racism, loss of familiarity, and trauma are all different things that induce depression alarmingly often in refugees no matter their ages. Although refugee children may not be able to fully identify what they are feeling, everything previously stated is experienced exactly the same no matter their age. Not only is this covered in the book Inside Out & Back Again, but various interviews and articles explain this thoroughly. “Refugee children… go through a process of mourning… losses. The grieving process in refugee children, however, is seldom recognised as such. Although these children may not known the concept of being homesick; they feel it all the same. Although some will not talk about their experience for the fear of upsetting their parents, perhaps it is also true that many do not talk because we do not listen,” says Ana Marie Fantino and Alice Colak
"It's been 10 years since the last time I was happy. After the death of my husband I don't remember being happy anymore. After he died I took on such a lot of responsibility, trying to make sure the family is happy. Now we have to adapt to what we have,” says Samira, a refugee from Syria (Oxfam). The incessant struggles that a refugee faces becomes custom-- a never ending loop of dismay which causes sadness to be their most prominent emotion. Racism, loss of familiarity, and trauma are all different things that induce depression alarmingly often in refugees no matter their ages. Although refugee children may not be able to fully identify what they are feeling, everything previously stated is experienced exactly the same no matter their age. Not only is this covered in the book Inside Out & Back Again, but various interviews and articles explain this thoroughly. “Refugee children… go through a process of mourning… losses. The grieving process in refugee children, however, is seldom recognised as such. Although these children may not known the concept of being homesick; they feel it all the same. Although some will not talk about their experience for the fear of upsetting their parents, perhaps it is also true that many do not talk because we do not listen,” says Ana Marie Fantino and Alice Colak