Syrian refugees live on difficult and harsh conditions on the Turkish-Syrian border, and some of them work for cheap wages that hardly reach a few dollars a day, but their conditions may be better compared to the difficult conditions experienced by more than a million displaced Syrians scattered at the Syrian border with Turkey, according to an organized statistic Syrian "Response Coordinators".

Behind the border barrier inside the Syrian territories are thousands of stories of civilians caught between a raging war in which the opportunity for their survival diminishes and the difficult living conditions that are scarce humanitarian aid sufficient to improve them.

According to the Syrian "Coordinators of Response" organization, more than a million Syrians displaced from Idlib and Aleppo countryside have reached the Syrian border with Turkey since last November.

They carried what was left of them fleeing the shelling of the regime forces and the Russian raids - which target their villages and homes in northern Syria - to the open in freezing weather.

According to the United Nations, hundreds of thousands of displaced people who have reached the areas near the Syrian-Turkish border are suffering from the lack of severe places to house them, in addition to the chronic shortage of food and basic needs.

Pain stories
In the Turkish city of Hatay, a Syrian refugee, Abd al-Rahman, who is in his fifth decade, was forced to work as a porter at a daily fee, but sometimes he is lucky and sometimes fails, especially in the winter.

He came to Hatay Jeriha years ago, due to the Syrian regime's bombing of Ma`rat al-Numan region in Idlib governorate, but he was no longer afraid of war and the regime's oppression.

After trying to work, Abd al-Rahman returns to his home, loaded with his anxieties, collecting the remainder of his wages instead of the days he worked, to buy some bread that he brings back to his children and the people of his home.

Abdul Rahman arrives at the middle of the day to the house, and his children receive him in search of what is in his hands, as this is their first and last meal on this day, and as soon as he sits with his family, requests are received from each side, but he is unable to meet most of them, and he says that his concern will not end in providing them, he has relatives Internally displaced people in Syria, facing the most severe and severe.