The displaced Syrian, Abu Ahmed, wished to return to his home and town, despite his continued suffering inside a tent in the camps of northern Syria, which lacks the minimum necessities for living, according to a video documented by the Civil Defense (White Helmets).

The Civil Defense attached the video to a comment, saying: "We are the people of Ahtra with tents... We don't want (we don't want) aid, we just want (we only want) to go back to our homes... Oppression and tragedy accompany Aba Ahmed and hundreds of thousands of Syrians in camps in northwestern Syria."

Abu Ahmed sits beside his tent, and complains that he has been displaced for the third year in a row inside his worn-out tent, which he is trying to repair as much as possible, but the breach is greater than the capacity of the Rataq.

"We are a people with tents...we don't want aid, we just want to go back to our homes."


Oppression and tragedy accompany Abu Ahmed and hundreds of thousands of Syrians in camps in northwestern #Syria.# Mud camps # White Helmets pic.twitter.com/zgG9Z3fSc1

- Syrian Civil Defense (@SyriaCivilDefe) November 24, 2022

Abu Ahmed explains in the video, and the worry appears on his face: Every year we say that it is our last year in the tents, tents made of cloth that cannot bear the conditions of life and the fluctuations of weather and bad conditions, and with the beginning of each year, hope is renewed that things will be resolved, but the tragedy is renewed and repeated again. .

And about the nature of his family, he says that I have 6 children, 5 girls and one young man, and I am sick. I previously had two surgeries, one in the artery and the other a disc operation, and my son cuts stones to get us our daily sustenance, then we collect nylon and pieces of cloth to keep warm on them, and we patch tents with the onset of winter .

He continues, "Yesterday it rained, and if it snowed, it would have entered us. The tent is worn out and cannot bear. We patch it from one place, and it is torn from another."

With his suffering intensifying, the displaced Syrian confirms that they do not want tents or aid, but rather they want to return to their homeland. Three years of this tragic situation left them with nothing but hope to return home, and uninterrupted hope in a merciful gesture to them from the countries of the world to end their continuous suffering.