Syrian
Refugees
Millions
of Syrians escape an apocalyptic civil war, creating a historic crisis.
By Paul Salopek
Photographs by John
Stanmeyer
What
happens when you become a war refugee? You walk.
True,
in order to save your life—for example, as militants assault your village—you
might first speed away by whatever conveyance possible. In the family car. Or
in your neighbor’s fruit truck. Aboard a stolen bus. Inside a cart pulled
behind a tractor. But eventually: a border. And it is here that you must walk.
Why? Because men in uniforms will demand to see your papers. What, no papers?
(Did you leave them behind? Did you grab your child’s hand instead, in that
last frantic moment of flight? Or perhaps you packed a bag with food, with
money?) It doesn’t matter. Get out of your vehicle. Stand over there. Wait.
Now, papers or no papers, your life as a refugee genuinely starts: on foot, in
the attitude of powerlessness.
In late
September near the Mürşitpınar border crossing in Turkey, Syrian
refugees came pouring across the fallow pepper fields by the tens of thousands.
They were ethnic Kurds. They were running from the bullets and knives of the
Islamic State. Many came in cars, in sedans and hatchbacks, in delivery vans
and pickup trucks, raising clouds of fine, white dust from some of the oldest
continuously farmed fields in the world. The Turks would not allow such a
motley caravan to pass. A parking lot of abandoned cars grew at the boundary.
One day black-clad Islamist fighters came and got the cars, stole them from
right under the noses of Turkish soldiers. The soldiers watched. They couldn’t
have cared less.
So it
begins. You take a step. You exit one life and enter another. You walk through
a cut border fence into statelessness, vulnerability, dependency, and
invisibility. You become a refugee.
“They
burned the city twice,” Atilla Engin said, standing atop Oylum
Höyük, a barren man-made hill in southeastern Turkey. “We don’t know who or
why. There were many wars back then.”
Engin
is a Turkish archaeologist from the University of Cumhuriyet. He stared into a
square pit being dug into the mound’s summit by villagers working under the
direction of his graduate students. The hole was 30 feet deep, and the mound
was among the biggest in Turkey: 120 feet high and 500 yards long, a lopsided
layer cake of time. Its oldest evidence of occupation dated from the Neolithic,
some 9,000 years ago. But above that—built, abandoned, and long since
forgotten—lies the debris of at least nine human eras. Copper Age masonry.
Bronze Age cuneiform tablets. Hellenistic coins. Roman and Byzantine brickwork.
Many
empires had seesawed back and forth across the often embattled heartland of
Asia Minor. Engin was focused on a walled Bronze Age settlement, possibly a
powerful city-state called Ullis, that was mentioned in ancient Hittite records
and Iron Age papyri. To reach this lost city, his team had shoveled through
strata that looked like cardiograms of upheaval—rumpled horizons of soil, ash,
and rubble, 9,000 years of systole and diastole, construction and destruction.
“Things
don’t change,” Engin said. He had the tired half smile of a man who thought in
millennia. “Outside powers still fight over this area—the Mesopotamian plain.
It is the meeting place of Africa, Asia, and Europe. It is the center of the
Middle East. It is a gateway of the world.”
From a
ladder that he used to photograph his sprawling dig, Engin could almost see the
refugee camp near Kilis, a nearby Turkish town on the Syrian border. Some
14,000 people who had fled Syria’s apocalyptic civil war have been stewing for
two and a half years in the camp, stupefied by boredom. An additional 90,000
Syrians have thronged the ramshackle town, doubling its original population and
driving up the rents. (The previous week an anti-Syrian mob had attacked
refugees and smashed their cars.)
There
are about 1.6 million Syrian war refugees in Turkey. Another eight million or
more are internally displaced within Syria or eke out a hand-to-mouth living in
such fragile way stations as Lebanon and Jordan. The war has bled into
neighboring Iraq too, of course, where the zealots of the Islamic State have
uprooted another two million civilians. All told, perhaps 12 million souls are
adrift across the larger Middle East. Like the refugee crisis that festered
during and after the Soviet-Afghan war of the 1980s—a Cold War contest that
displaced and then utterly ignored millions of angry, hopeless people, spawning
years of transnational Islamist terrorism—the political fallout in the region
is unfathomable and will be lasting.
“This
isn’t just about Turkey or Syria anymore,” Selin Ünal, a spokeswoman for UNHCR,
the UN refugee agency, told me in the Kilis camp. “This is a problem that will
affect the entire world. There is something historic going on here.”
I had
trekked to the Oylum mound in southeastern Turkey as part of the Out of Eden
Walk, a seven-year journey that is retracing the first human diaspora out of
Africa to our species’ land’s end at the tip of South America. Along my trail
through the Middle East, I had encountered desperate men and women cast up
everywhere, like flotsam, by Syria’s many-sided war. They picked tomatoes for
$11 a day in Jordan. They begged for pocket change on Turkish street corners.
Some I discovered squatting under tarps on the Anatolian steppe, escapees from
the wrath of nationalist mobs in the cities. Their ragged children tracked my
movements with hard, appraising eyes.
The
Oylum mound knuckles up from the heart of the Fertile Crescent—the ancient
Levantine temperate zone where modernity was born. It was here that humankind
first settled down, founded cities, invented the idea of a fixed home. Yet for
months I had been stumbling across a vast panorama of mass homelessness. I
asked Engin what had befallen the pioneering urban dwellers at Oylum once their
citadel had been breached and torched by some invader 3,800 years ago. He was
unsure. “They went back into the countryside,” he said. He placed a palm on the
frail wall of his pit. “They forgot cities. They got poorer.”
And,
doubtless, some regrouped. Perhaps they even conquered their conquerors. Forced
migration begets empire.
The
United Nations calculates that by the end of 2013, more than 51
million people worldwide were displaced because of warfare, violence, and
persecution. More than half were women and children. Among Syrian refugees in
Turkey, the proportion of women and children zooms to 75 percent. The men stay
behind to fight or protect property. The women and children become destitute
wanderers. Journalists rarely follow these women’s fates into urban slums,
crowded camps, plastic lean-tos pegged in watermelon fields. Into brothels.
Their woes are not telegenic. There are few dramatic explosions. There are no
flags or front lines to be contested by the dictator Bashar al Assad, by the
countless rebels. Syria’s women suffer their wars alone, in silence, in alien
lands.
“It is
a huge hidden issue,” said Elif Gündüzyeli, a social worker with Support to
Life, a Turkish relief organization. “And these women’s vulnerability is
transforming society.”
In
secular Turkey a tidal wave of unaccompanied Syrian women is reviving banned
Islamic traditions such as polygamy. In Jordan refugee families marry off
daughters as young as 13, hoping to leverage them out of camps, off the
streets, out of poverty.
“Nobody
protects you,” said Mona (not her real name), a young Syrian woman stranded in
the Turkish city of Şanlıurfa. “You get harassed constantly. Three men tried to
pull me into a car. They grabbed my arm. I screamed. The people on the
sidewalks did nothing. They did nothing. I want to leave this place. Can you
help me? Where can I go?”
In
other Turkish cities teeming with refugees, anti-Syrian protests have erupted.
The spark in one case was the knifing of a Turk by a Syrian neighbor. So
corrosive are the sexual politics of refugees in Turkey that a false rumor
attributed the killing to the Turk’s demand for sex with the Syrian’s wife in
return for rent.
“Four
times—no, five,” a Syrian Kurdish woman named Rojin (also a pseudonym) told me,
counting the number of marriage proposals she had received in Turkey over the
past week. “Two,” her sister added. “Three,” said a third sister. The women sat
cross-legged in a barren room decorated with a dandelion in a Coke bottle. They
rarely left the room. A fourth relative had not been propositioned—their senile
grandmother. The old woman sat blinking, lost in dreams. She was hard to watch.
She did not understand what she had lost. She had been born in Aleppo when
Syria was a French mandate. Her granddaughters were hoping for asylum in
France.
In the
charred ruins of his ancient city under the Oylum mound, Engin has discovered
two bodies. Both these victims of the city’s mysterious destruction were
female. We know next to nothing about them except perhaps the pathos of their
social status. Their skeletons lay curled inside the kitchen of a grand
mud-brick palace.
Jason
Ur, an archaeologist at Harvard, studies the changing settlement patterns in
ancient Assyria. “Population displacements have a long and sad history in the
region,” Ur says. They happened “repeatedly over the last 3,000 years at
least.”
Bas-relief
carvings from Mesopotamia depict Iron Age armies prodding entire populations
before them. In these ancient scenes the civilians are captive, harnessed. They
wear chains. In this way whole communities were relocated, by violence, to work
as agricultural labor for one of the world’s earliest empires. In a forthcoming
paper, Ur and his colleague James Osborne suggest that settlements began to
appear in eastern Syria between 934 and 605 B.C., in a
“repeating pattern of evenly spaced small villages” laid out by the
neo-Assyrian kings.
Saddam
Hussein, the “butcher of Baghdad,” did much the same thing in northern Iraq,
replacing “unruly” Kurds with obedient ethnic Arab farmers. A century ago the
Turks cleaned out “disloyal” Armenians, killing up to 1.5 million people and
giving away their lands to Turkish neighbors. This is a story that would be
familiar to the Sioux, to the Apache. Ethnic cleansing, ruthless social
engineering, “homesteading”—these are not new concepts. They arose with the
city-state.
Inscriptions
from a temple built by neo-Assyrian King Ashurnasirpal II, who ruled Nimrud
from 883 to 859 B.C., south of present-day Mosul, Iraq: “I captured many troops
alive: from time to time I cut off their arms [and] hands; from others I cut
off their noses, ears, extremities. I gouged out the eyes of many troops. I
made one pile of the living [and] one of heads. I hung their heads on trees
around the city.”
And: “I
cleansed my weapons in the Great Sea and made sacrifices to the gods.”
Such
primitive boasting sounds contemporary, like an Islamic State video posted on
YouTube.
Anatolia—the
sprawling Asian peninsula of eastern Turkey. A continental
crossroads. The eternal frontier of empires. A palimpsest of forced migrations.
I
walked its chalky roads past the broken foundations of Assyrian cities. I saw
pediments of Greek columns swallowed in weedy gardens. I passed derelict
Armenian churches turned to mosques. I trod on highways of stone buffed by
endless processions of Roman feet. In antique Harran, an ancient center of
learning under the Romans, Byzantines, and Arabs just a dozen miles from the Syrian
border, thousands of Muslim scholars once experimented with physics and
engineering. A minaret stood there on an empty plain—all that remains of the
city that was leveled by the Mongols. And I passed the white tents of the
Syrians. They were everywhere. Their doleful presence on the antique landscape
seemed a sign of tectonic change, some unfathomable portent. Like the
Palestinian diaspora. Or the Jewish diaspora. History shook underfoot. The
tents of the refugees glowed yellow in the night, a new constellation.
“Everyone
thought this would be temporary,” a Turkish baker named Mustafa Bayram told me
in Kilis.
He
threw up his hands. He wanted to be kind—Turkey had been kind, spending
billions of dollars on housing and feeding refugees—but the Syrians were still
coming. They were driving Bayram out of business. They worked for slave wages.
They opened illegal shops, undercutting him. “I think,” he said, bitterly, “we
should gather them up. We should put them all into one giant camp.”
The war
in Syria boiled and boiled. Engin was losing his local workers. Each day a few
didn’t show up for roll call. They abandoned his archaeological dig at the
Oylum mound and slipped over the border. They may have joined the jihad.
I
walked on through autumn. Temperatures dropped. I found myself stepping over
columns of ants that crawled manically through brittle yellow grass. They shone
glossy black, as if oiled, and vanished down their holes. They carried enormous
quantities of seeds. It seemed a message, to lay in provisions like this. After
a false Arab Spring, a hard winter was coming to the Middle East.
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