Toronto

Young artists find inspiration in tragedy to help fund trauma kit for Syrian refugees

Eight artists' work is being auctioned off in an effort to fund a mental wellness first aid project put together by the Syrian Canadian Foundation and the Al-Qazzaz Foundation for Education and Development (QED) for refugees.

'Mental wellness resources especially for vulnerable populations are often stretched thin,' says one artist

Aisha Hyder is one of eight artists whose designed a pieces to be auctioned off in an effort to fund a mental wellness first aid project put together by the Syrian Canadian Foundation and the Al-Qazzaz Foundation for Education and Development (QED). (Laura DaSilva/CBC)

Steps away from where his lifeless body washed ashore is a version of a life that could have been for little Aylan Kurdi.

The plumes of smoke from a nearby blast transform into flying doves as a backpack-wearing Kurdi finds his feet. Next to that is Kurdi, an adult now, a doctor peering down into the face of a baby in his arms.

It's a timeline that looks almost normal. But it will never be for the three-year-old, whose name became synonymous with tragedy after he was photographed face-down on a Turkish beach after his family fled the northern Syrian city of Kobani amid the years-long conflict in the country.

But a world away in Toronto, for young artists Aisha Hyder and Nouran Alabdeh, the little boy represents something more. 

Hyder and Alabdeh are two of eight artists with Young Artists for Syria, a project with MY Voice Canada, whose work is being auctioned off in an effort to raise funds for an Arabic-language mental wellness project by the Syrian Canadian Foundation and the Al-Qazzaz Foundation for Education and Development (QED). 

"In our painting, he's also the symbol of the Syrian children who will hopefully one day rise. They will grow, they will educate, they will love and they will hopefully rebuild and reclaim their land," Hyder, 19, told CBC Toronto.  

Their painting is called "A hope from the deep of darkness," and through it, says Hyder, "We're showing what his journey could have been."

Language a key barrier to help

QED is the brainchild of former political prisoner Khaled Al-Qazzaz, who was detained in Egypt for nearly two years after its former leader Mohammed Morsi was ousted by military forces in 2013.

If he ever made it out alive, Al-Qazzaz resolved inside his insect-infested cell, he would put his energies toward the betterment of children. After his return home to Mississauga, Ont., the 39-year-old launched his foundation aimed at helping refugees build new lives in Canada — and finding a way to address their trauma.

Psychiatrist Dr. Samer Al Dandashi has seen that kind of trauma firsthand.

Three years ago, when University of Toronto graduate Khaled Al Qazzaz was languishing in an Egypt jail, he told fellow prisoner Mohamed Fahmy, if he were ever released, he would give back. Today, he launches his own foundation focused in part on helping to resettle refugees. (CBC)

The Edmonton-based doctor works closely with Syrian refugees grappling with depression, adjustment and post-traumatic stress disorders. Language, he says, is one of the key barriers in accessing mental health help.

"A significant number of those refugees do not speak English." But, for example, if someone required cognitive behavioural therapy to treat their PTSD, there are a limited number of mental health professionals who can speak Arabic.

Concept began in bread bags 

That's why the "mental wellness first aid kits" that Hyder and Alabdeh are fundraising for are Arabic-based. The project is made up of a series of videos that contain self-care tips for Syrian refugees and also offers in-person therapy workshops.

It's a concept based on research out of the University of Manchester, where a research team distributed similar tips in the form of pamphlets inside bread bags to Syrian refugees in Turkey.

Some of the artwork being showcased at MuslimFest in Mississauga, Ont. over the August long weekend. (CBC)

"The idea is that mental wellness resources especially for vulnerable populations are often stretched thin," said Hyder.

"It can take many months to get an appointment with a psychiatrist and then therapists can cost hundreds of dollars per visit. So this makes mental wellness resources inaccessible."

Al Dandashi has found that symptoms associated with PTSD can subside within two or three years of refugees being in Canada, but points out that a successful treatment requires a formal psychological assessment and in many cases, a combination of therapy and medication.

But with resources like that often out of reach for newcomers, QED hopes its project will be a valuable starting point for refugees looking for help.

'Memories that were held there'

Sereen Aziz shares that hope.  

For 17-year-old Sereen Aziz, her painting of the bustling Souq al-Hamadiyya in the old city of Damascus is a chance to deepen her connection with her country of origin. (Laura DaSilva/CBC)

The 17-year-old, whose parents are from Syria, is another one of the artists contributing to the project — but she's never been to the country herself. 

Still, she sees her painting of the bustling Souq al-Hamadiyya market in the old city of Damascus as a chance to deepen her connection with her country of origin.

"Syria is a beautiful place although these landmarks may be destroyed," said Aziz.

"It'll never be the same again, but there's still the memories that were held there."