Refugees in Jordan Return to Syria to Fight Against Assad
RAMTHA, JORDAN — Four Syrian women sat in a circle in a small apartment during the weekend, reminiscing about green fields and the homes they left behind months ago as their neighborhoods descended into violence and basic food supplies dried up.
The women took turns, too, narrating the last conversations they had with their husbands before the men left this impoverished Jordanian town and crossed back into the border city of Dera’a, a flash point early in the Syrian rebellion.
“My husband said it was his duty to go back and fight against the Syrian regime because the situation has become intolerable,” said Fatima, 28, as her three children and their cousins ran barefoot in and out of their dark, cramped living room. She asked that her family name not be used because of security concerns.
“I cried a lot when he left us but I always had a feeling my husband would return to join the battle,” she said. “There are others who also are returning.”
Her brother-in-law had returned to Syria recently, she said, leaving his wife and children behind.
Region-wide, of more than 60,000 Syrian refugees registered by United Nations relief workers, 74 percent are women and children.
The Jordan Health Aid Society, a non-governmental organization, said that of the 12,873 home visits it has made to Syrian refugees since January, nearly 500 households consisted of just women with their children.
While increasing numbers of Syrians, especially from cities like Homs and Dera’a, are fleeing into Jordan, young men are returning at a steady flow to Syria, some to fight against the forces of President Bashar al-Assad.
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