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Gallery|Humanitarian Crises

Life on hold for Iraqi Christian refugees in Jordan

Fourteen churches across Jordan last year welcomed hundreds of refugees, most of whom still remain in the country.

Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Suad Shamoon, 63, sits with Hinda Korgis, 67, in a room they share in the banquet hall of Amman's St Joseph Catholic Church. Both have children who have resettled in Western countries. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
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By Kelly Lynn
Published On 18 Sep 201518 Sep 2015

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Amman – A few blocks from Amman’s cosmopolitan Rainbow Street, the banquet hall of St Joseph Catholic Church swells with the sounds of families. But instead of a holiday party or wedding reception, the space is a makeshift home to 72 Iraqi Christian refugees who have lived together for the past year after fleeing violence from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

Fourteen different churches across Jordan opened their doors in August 2014 to roughly 1,000 Christian Iraqis, the majority from Mosul and Qaraqosh in the north. After one year, most are still in these improvised living quarters. Their rooms are typically divided by particle board, while Caritas, an international Catholic charity, helps to care for them. 

King Abdullah II extended an invitation last year to Christian refugees from Iraq as their numbers multiplied. Father Nour al-Qusmusa, an Iraqi Catholic priest living in Amman, has acted as an intermediary between the refugees, the Jordanian government, local host churches and Caritas.

Like the rest of the approximately 30,000 Iraqi refugees making Jordan an indefinite home, those sheltered in the churches cannot formally work. Their days are filled with chores, cooking and waiting. Many hope to relocate to Western countries to join relatives.

The Vatican recently announced a pledge of financial support to help individual families still living in the churches to secure an apartment and pay for 12 months of rent upfront.

Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Korgis says her children relocated to Europe before ISIL became a threat, while her husband died of natural causes before she made the trip to Jordan. She applied to join her sons in Sweden, but was not approved. 'They stamped my passport, a big stamp that says I was denied. I don't know why. I don't understand it.' [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
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Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Karam Mar Zena, 5, sits at a table in St Joseph while men play dominoes. Karam has suffered from anxiety and bed-wetting since his family fled their home in Qaraqosh, informally known as Iraq's Christian capital, 30km outside Mosul. Before coming to Jordan, Karam and his family stayed in another crowded church in Iraqi Kurdistan for three months. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Samir Attala and his wife, Muna, stand in their room as their son sleeps. Samir is applying for visas abroad and insists that relocation is the only option for their children's future. 'One of these countries will have mercy; I am sure of it,' he says. 'Everyone knows about [ISIL], everyone knows we Christians have the most to lose. Someone will help us, like Jordan has already. I am sure of it.' [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Jinan Jajoo, 40, hangs laundry on the roof of St Joseph with her 20-year-old son, Edeyr. With Jordan's limited water supply, the refugees are allowed two showers per week and one day of laundry. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Suad Shamoon cuts 21-month-old Mariam's hair. Suad has no family members with her at St Joseph, but will join her sons in the United States as soon as her visa is issued. 'My life is waiting,' she says. 'Every day feels like a year.' [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Samir Awad, 30, helps dish up lunch in the kitchen of St Ephraim's Syrian Orthodox Church in the Ashrafiya neighbourhood of Amman. Samir fled his home in Mosul with his sister before ISIL eventually seized his house, his car and most of his belongings. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
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Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Haneen, Raneen, and Savio sit outside the banquet hall of St Ephraim's on a recent afternoon, playing backgammon. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Martin Fowzy, 4, stands in the kitchen with friends while lunch is prepared. All food is shared communally, and on most days, refugees rotate cooking responsibilities for the main meal of the day. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Yaldez Fowzy prepares meat for stuffed vegetables in her room, once an office at St Ephraim's and now home to her and her son's family. They are hoping to relocate to Australia to join relatives. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Mark Youssef watches television in the room he shares with his parents. Jordan's education system has suffered from limited resources and space as refugee populations flood the country. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]
Kelly Lunde/ DO NOT USE/ RESTRICTED
Bushra Youssef fixes her hair in a multipurpose room in the banquet hall of St Joseph. Sixteen families share the space, which includes two bathrooms and one kitchen. [Kelly Lynn/Al Jazeera]


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