Syrian Refugee Crisis Is Changing Women's Traditional Roles In The Family

They're serving as heads of households and the main breadwinners.
NOVEMBER 16: A Syrian woman from Kafer Hend, Syria sells chewing gum in a wealthy district of Beirut on November 16, 2013 in Beirut, Lebanon.
NOVEMBER 16: A Syrian woman from Kafer Hend, Syria sells chewing gum in a wealthy district of Beirut on November 16, 2013 in Beirut, Lebanon.
Spencer Platt via Getty Images

LONDON, Sept 10 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The Syrian refugee crisis is changing women’s traditional roles with increasing numbers becoming heads of households and the main breadwinners, an international aid agency said on Saturday ahead of a global refugee summit.

Most women view the changes negatively with many feeling far more vulnerable to violence, abuse and harassment, CARE said in a report as it called for world leaders to put women refugees at the heart of the Sept. 19 and 20 talks in New York.

Some 4.8 million Syrians have fled to surrounding countries during five years of war. Others have risked their lives to reach Europe.

The number of female-headed Syrian households in Jordan has risen to nearly 40 percent from a quarter a couple of years ago, CARE said. With men struggling to find work or absent, more women are taking up jobs or even setting up small businesses.

Rana, a Syrian refugee, works on a handmade loom under Jasmine, a project which hires and trains Syrian refugee women to create handicrafts, in Amman, Jordan, July 11, 2016. REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed
Rana, a Syrian refugee, works on a handmade loom under Jasmine, a project which hires and trains Syrian refugee women to create handicrafts, in Amman, Jordan, July 11, 2016. REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed
Muhammad Hamed / Reuters

“We are seeing something very similar to what happened during World War One and Two across Europe whereby women are forced to take on new roles - and there are both positive and negative aspects to this,” CARE policy adviser Howard Mollett told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In Greece, Syrian refugees estimate half of refugee households to be female-headed. Some have lost male family members in the war, while others are trying to join husbands already living in Europe.

Batoul, a Syrian mother who rarely left her home before the war broke out, told CARE how she had spent months travelling thousands of kilometres alone with her baby to try to join her husband in Germany.

The first thing she wants to do on reaching Germany is learn the language and look for a job. “My husband is traditional but he will support this. Women are strong and we have a new role to play,” she told CARE at a camp in Serbia.

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Aid workers say women refugees arriving in the Balkans are highly vulnerable, generally having less money and fewer resources than men.

CARE said some mothers travelling on their own formed sexual relationship in the hope the man would protect them and their children while they were on the road.

A Syrian refugee woman sells vegetables at the Zaatari refugee camp, home to more than 55,000 Syrians, located close to the Jordanian city of Mafraq, near the border with Syria on January 3, 2013.
A Syrian refugee woman sells vegetables at the Zaatari refugee camp, home to more than 55,000 Syrians, located close to the Jordanian city of Mafraq, near the border with Syria on January 3, 2013.
KHALIL MAZRAAWI via Getty Images

Women have also described being forced to have sex to secure services and travel documents.

Mollett said some of the camps in Europe were shocking and lacked lighting, locks on showers and toilets and separate sleeping sections to keep women and children safe.

“While I was in Greece over the past month, multiple stories emerged of human traffickers and other predatory individuals preying on women and children in the official camps as well as those living homeless in the street,” he added.

The report, entitled On Her Own, also highlights increasing poverty among refugees with four fifths in Jordan now living below the poverty line.

Mollett said rates of child marriage among refugees had almost doubled since the start of the war partly because of increasing destitution.

The U.N. refugee summit aims to forge a more humane international response to refugee and migrant crises.

It will be followed by a summit of world leaders hosted by U.S. President Barack Obama aimed at generating new funding and boosting refugee resettlement.

(Editing by Ros Russell; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, which covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org to see more stories.)

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