Impact Syria | 20-2-2023

How are Open Doors partners supporting Christians impacted by the earthquakes?

 

 
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Thank you for praying for and supporting our church family affected by the earthquakes on Monday 6 February. Local Open Doors partners are working hard to assess the needs of believers and others and provide trauma care and aid.  
 
 

What’s the situation in Syria? 

In Aleppo and Latakia, people are searching for a safe place to stay for the night. Churches have opened their doors and people are now starting to find places to sleep. These people are also receiving food, supplied by local partners.  

In Latakia, three churches have offered shelter to victims so far. In one church alone there are nearly 1,000 people. In Aleppo, 7,000 people across different churches are being cared for with shelter, food, water and other basic needs. Open Doors partners are supporting these churches in their response to the crisis.

 

“[Though] our partner church leaders are affected themselves, they are providing food.”

Leyla, Open Doors partner
“I saw destruction everywhere,” says Leyla (name changed), an Open Doors local staff member who arrived in Aleppo this week. “I saw people gathered in the streets, next to their new ‘home’—their car, where they are now sleeping.”

While such sights are horrifying, in Syria they are all too familiar. Christians in northern Syria have suffered crisis after crisis for more than a decade. Many believers are still trying to rebuild after the brutal reign of the Islamic State group and the recent conflict with Turkish forces. The earthquake is just the latest tragedy to impact them.

“Aleppo was already devastated by the decade-long [Syrian civil] war,” Leyla says. “It was already unsafe for residents to be staying in some buildings, so when the earthquake hit, lots of buildings crumbled in minutes.”

Some believers wonder why something like this is happening yet again. They’ve been through so much over the last 15 years.
 

God's hand is still visible in Syria

And yet, God’s hand is still visible to His people in Syria. Leyla told a story of a woman who lives on the fifth floor of a building with her son. Their building collapsed, but both the woman and her son miraculously survived. The son, who didn’t believe in God, yelled “thanks be to God” and decided to begin following Jesus.


People in Latakia are being supported through local churches in the area - please keep praying that God will provide for their needs

Leyla visited three churches in Aleppo and saw the earthquake damage first-hand—what hadn’t been destroyed by years of war was suffering due to the impact of the earthquake. Even the churches have visible cracks in some cases. And the cold winter creates an additional challenge. “In Aleppo, the temperature drops below [freezing] at night,” Leyla says.

“[Though] our partner church leaders are affected themselves, they are providing food distribution and shelter for the homeless,” Leyla says.

 

“The Centres of Hope are opening their doors for everyone”

Leyla, Open Doors partner
The church in Syria has been through more than a decade of challenges, and the earthquakes present a new and horrible reality. But God’s people are not about to give up on serving their community and being a light for Jesus in the midst of the darkness. “The Centres of Hope are opening their doors for everyone,” Leyla says. The wider community is receiving vital support here, and many are sleeping in the church hall at night.

Reverend Ibrahim, a pastor in Aleppo, says that even non-Christians are seeing the light of Jesus thanks to the help the churches have provided.
 

Rev Ibrahim

“They have seen Jesus Christ working through us,” he says. “That He was and is and will be with us in the critical times. In one way or another, the church was carrying the living existence of Jesus Christ among the suffering society, among the community that was feeling that God was far away from them.”

He tells the story of one woman, a non-Christian, who wanted to express her gratitude for the church’s help - even though she didn't know the word 'Christian'. “People of the cross,” she told Reverend Ibrahim, “you were our family, taking care of us.” 
 

What’s the situation in Turkey? 

In Turkey, local partners are working with Iranian Christian refugees who have been affected by the earthquakes. We know of one Turkish Christian family in Adana that have lost a child and their house. The local church there was able to give them food and spend time with them. Please pray for them as they grieve. 

The current need here is not for shelter, but for heaters, blankets and sleeping bags; these are what our partners and local churches are working towards providing. Please pray for peace – there is a lot of fear due to the continuing aftershocks, and many people are frightened and panicked. 
   

Local church partners continue to gather information and resources 

Thanks to your prayers and support, Open Doors partners in the affected areas are helping churches that are offering shelter to the victims of the earthquakes, to those whose houses are damaged and to those who are afraid to sleep in their own homes because of potential further aftershocks. Food and other basic needs are being distributed as well, such as mattresses and blankets. 

Local partners are also working to identify those in need of trauma care, and will work with them to make sure they are properly cared for. The team in Syria are currently looking to identify ten students who were about to graduate from a trauma school programme to form a group, led by a professional, who will provide basic trauma care.
 
please pray
 
  • Give thanks for all the support Open Doors partners have been able to give so far and for the impact it’s having
  • That more shelter and aid will become available, and more people will be cared for
  • That God will pour out His peace on Turkey and Syria and calm any fears of future disaster.
please give

You can give now to support Open Doors partners in Syria and Turkey as they support people impacted by the earthquakes, and for the long-term. Your gift can help provide emergency food, shelter and other relief to those affected, as well as long-term support.

Urgent Earthquake Appeal