The screams of a dozen Syrian and Palestinian children pierce the air of a community center in Lebanon’s Shatila refugee camp.
Yet, the children are not hurt. They are yelling to express the anger and fear they feel as victims of conflict in special “peace education” classes.
“We don’t hit each other. We don’t say bad things about each other. Boys don’t hit girls,” said 11-year-old Hala, who asked not to be identified for security reasons.
Hala fled Deir el-Zor in Syria and has been living in Lebanon for less than two years. She said one of her favorite activities is “playback,” where each child will tell a story or describe a situation that is bothering them and will have the other children act it out.
Organized by Basmeh and Zeitooneh, a local charity, the classes in a chaotic fifth floor room were set up to help children voice their opinions, release the stress caused by war and displacement and rediscover their imaginations, staff said.
They hope by providing children with activities such as painting, drama and storytelling, they will be less vulnerable to recruitment by militant groups preying on children and teenagers who might be out of school with little to occupy them.
“These kids have been through a lot. They’re traumatized in many different ways,” said “peace education” project manager Elio Gharios.
“They’re agitated, maybe introverted, aggressive at times,” he said.
Lebanon is home to more than 1 million Syrian refugees, half of them children.
In 1949, it opened the Shatila camp in Beirut to host Palestinian refugees fleeing Israel’s founding in 1948.
As a new wave of Syrian refugees joined the ranks of the displaced, Shatila has grown upwards, with some buildings now six floors high.
Houses are damp and overcrowded and the tangled electricity wires that hang across the streets cause multiple deaths each year.
More of an urban slum than a traditional refugee camp, Shatila which covers 1km2 is home to as many as 42,000 people, according to Rasha Shukr, the Beirut area manager for Basma and Zeitooneh.
Gharios, a 24-year-old Lebanese psychology graduate, said children aged between seven and 14 attend the classes with up to 20 children in each session.
Each class starts with the children deciding on rules for how they can and cannot treat each other.
“They need to know that finding peaceful ways to resolve conflicts is a very important matter ... They are reminded every time that violence is not the solution, it’s not the way,” Gharios said.
“They’re young, it is the teenagers who are easiest to brainwash. Many children know how to roll a joint, say, and they’re 11 or 12. Many in here have witnessed things happen where someone would hold a gun against someone else’s head,” Gharios said.
Young Syrian refugees are at particular risk of being recruited by extremist groups in Lebanon and elsewhere because their recent displacement often fuels a sense of hopelessness, said UK-based charity International Alert, which funds projects in Shatila camp, including the classes.
Palestinian groups including Hamas militants and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah movement are active inside Shatila, according to charities working there.
The Islamic State group and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, formerly known as the al-Nusra Front, have also been known to target young refugees online, they said.
International Alert said these classes make children less vulnerable to recruitment because they provide them with a safe environment to discuss problems, learn conflict resolution skills and to rebuild a sense of purpose.
Caroline Brooks, Syria projects manager at International Alert, which supports similar programs throughout Lebanon, Syria and Turkey, said there were many reasons why children may join an extremist group.
Often there is a need for a sense of significance, purpose and belonging, and sometimes there is a desire for revenge, she said.
A lack of alternatives and the need to make a living are also strong pull factors, Brooks said.
Conflict and displacement tend to fuel the abuse and exploitation of children, refugee experts said.
For example, many children are forced to work or beg to feed themselves and their families, young girls face greater risk of being married off and domestic violence increases, they said.
“Peace education” classes, which started this year, have already had some impact, Brooks said citing a 17-year-old in the program who was approached by an Islamic State recruiter through Facebook.
The teenager immediately reported it to a member of staff involved in the classes.
For Hala, the classes which she has been attending for eight months have made a huge difference to her and her younger siblings.
“My brothers changed. They became much happier,” she said.
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