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Aleppo’s underground orphanage offers a haven for children bereaved by war

Children from ages two to 14 sleep, eat and study in subterranean refuge while the bombing continues overhead

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Inside the Outstanding Guys orphanage in Aleppo. Photo: Dr Zaher Sahloul
The Guardian

Two floors underground, Aleppo’s luckier orphans sleep as safely as anyone can in a city at war, though they are jolted awake regularly by bombs ripping apart the streets above them.

Watching over them are Asmar Halabi and his wife, who knows in intimate, painful detail the damage explosives can do, because she still carries injuries picked up in an air strike on a school two years ago.

The suffering of the Syrian city’s children, who have lived through years of bombing, was thrust back into the headlines last week by a photograph of five-year-old Omran Daqneesh, bereft and bloodied in the back of an ambulance.
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His parents were also pulled alive from the rubble of their home, and the family have since been reunited. But as Russian air strikes and government barrel bombs tear apart rebel-held east Aleppo street by street, many children endure even greater shock and loss.

Halabi’s 50 charges at the Moumayazoun (Outstanding Guys) orphanage are some of the most vulnerable individuals left in the city. The orphanage moved below ground when relentless bombardment became too much for normal life to continue, and it now provides a subterranean haven.

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Asmar Halabi, the orphanage’s director. Photo: Dr Zaher Sahloul
Asmar Halabi, the orphanage’s director. Photo: Dr Zaher Sahloul
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