When Hanan Dacka fled the civil war in Syria with her family to start a new life in Brazil, the idea that she might one day carry the Olympic torch was beyond the stretch of anyone’s imagination.
At first, she struggled to settle into school, not knowing how to speak Portuguese. Her family lived, and still lives, in a cramped one-bedroom apartment in Sao Paulo. Her brother works seven days a week in a store.
Yet the 12-year-old girl ran with the Olympic flame in Brasilia in May, on the first day of its journey through more than 300 towns and cities. The Summer Olympic Games begin on Aug. 5 in Rio de Janeiro.
Photo: AFP / RIO2016
She was chosen by the Rio 2016 Organizing Committee after her name was put forward by the UN refugee agency in Brazil.
Her high-profile Olympics role put a spotlight on the lives of refugees who have settled in Brazil, which is deep in the throes of recession.
Brazil’s economy is expected to contract nearly 4 percent this year, for a second consecutive year.
Economists’ forecasts suggest a downturn of a magnitude not seen since Brazil began keeping records in 1901.
Refugees like the Dacka family are finding it hard to land permanent jobs and get state support to settle in.
“The labor market conditions in general are terrible, especially for those who are looking for jobs now, especially for those who don’t have the skills,” Federal University of Rio de Janeiro economics professor Rudi Rocha said.
“For this reason, the situation for those who are arriving in Brazil, the immigrants, the refugees in particular, is complicated,” he said.
A wave of refugees who began arriving in Brazil a few years ago was met with a steadier economy and greater job prospects, he said.
Today’s refugees may find only informal, temporary positions in the services and retail sectors, he said.
About 2,100 Syrian refugees live in Brazil, mostly in the country’s most populous city of Sao Paulo.
Dacka said when she arrived, her classmates did not know what it meant to be a refugee and she stumbled in her schoolwork.
“I could not follow the pace,” she said. “It was a surprise for me to hear a different language here.”
Brazil, the region’s largest country, receives more Syrian refugees than any other country in Latin America.
Starting in 2013, Brazil issued special visas under simplified procedures to allow survivors of the war in Syria to travel to the country, where they can claim asylum.
Last year, Brazil signed a deal with the EU to fast-track Syrian immigration to help some of the millions who have fled their homes in the deadly conflict, now in its sixth year.
The Dacka family arrived in Brazil just over a year ago, fleeing Syria for Jordan, where they spent two-and-a-half years at a refugee camp, said the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which provided details of their lives.
In Jordan, water was scarce and the weather, scorching hot by day and freezing at night, was harsh.
“I lived in a tent, with no bathroom, with my father, my mother and my brother, Mustafa,” the girl said. “We could not play outside the tent at the refugee camp.”
The family applied for visas through the Brazilian embassy in Amman.
Now they live with the girl’s uncle, aunt and four cousins in an apartment shared by 11 family members in all.
Hanan’s father, Khaled Dacka, worked at a currency exchange office in Syria and is a factory worker in Sao Paulo, making car parts. Her mother, Yusla Dacka, is a housewife.
“For any refugee, especially for those coming from the Middle East, they have a cultural shock,” UNHCR spokesman Luiz Fernando Godinho said.
Refugees in Brazil face falling wages, as well as rising unemployment.
Average monthly wages in April dropped by more than 3 percent from a year earlier to an average of 1,962 reais (US$604), according to the state-run Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics.
Joblessness rose to 10.9 percent in the first quarter of this year, compared with 7.9 percent a year earlier, the institute said.
The outlook is sobering, with unemployment predicted to rise until at least 2018.
“For poor refugees, particularly if they don’t have any help from a migrant community that is already here, it is really tough,” said Oliver Stuenkel, assistant professor of International Relations at the Sao Paulo-based Getulio Vargas Foundation.
Refugees can expect little in the way of healthcare, which many Brazilians only receive through private means, and services such as sewage and water, he said.
“Half of Brazilians don’t have a functioning sewage system; they don’t have proper running water. You can’t really say that the state should provide that to refugees without any money because then it would be providing better services to refugees than to its own population,” Stuenkel said.
Overall, the Brazilian state has “very little capacity” to help integrate new refugees, Stuenkel said.
However, a lack of anti-immigrant sentiment in Brazil does make it an attractive option, he said.
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