The world pays attention to Angelina Jolie when she's stepping out with partner Brad Pitt, writing opinion pieces and spurring debate about breast cancer or promoting her latest movie.
Now, she's is hoping to turn that spotlight onto Syria's refugee crisis.
This week, Jolie -- a
special envoy for the U.N.'s refugee agency -- traveled to the world's
second-largest refugee camp, where she spoke to Syrian refugees and documented their stories in a video for CNN.
Nearly 1.7 million
Syrians have fled the country's brutal civil war, many living in densely
crowded refugee camps in Syria's neighboring countries. Jordan's
Za'atri refugee camp, which Jolie visited to mark Thursday's World Refugee Day, was built to house 20,000 refugees but now has more than 120,000.
Their stories of survival and loss are harrowing. Some refugees say they are marrying off their young daughters to protect them from rapists in the camps
2012: Jolie visits Syrian refugees
Photos: Celebrities' forays into diplomacy
Refugee figures fail to give true picture of Syria crisis
One family at the Za'atri
camp told Jolie of a mortar that exploded in their Damascus home. At
the time of the blast, the couple's 4-year-old son, who suffers from a
birth defect and cannot walk, was playing inside.
The boy's eardrums were shattered.
"I tried to stay," said the mother, Mouna Ahmed. "I wanted to stay, but after the bombing, it was just too difficult."
She fled with her
family, even though she was pregnant. Even in Jordan, when her children
hear a plane overhead, they get scared, Ahmed said.
Giving a voice to refugees is arguably the most difficult role Jolie accepted when she agreed to become the U.N.'s special envoy for refugees last year. Months after accepting the role, she visited Syrian refugees living in camps in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan.
Some analysts have warned that Syria's quagmire will trigger the world's worst refugee crisis if it is not addressed.
"This is undoubtedly the
world's worst refugee crisis in decades, and if we don't get off this
slippery slope, it will soon become the largest in our lifetime,"
Kristalina Georgieva, a humanitarian commissioner for the European
Commission, told the Daily Telegraph this week.
"It is so disappointing to see the international community sleepwalking into this disaster."
Every 14 seconds, another Syrian is displaced across national boundaries, according to the U.N.
Last week, the U.N. made its largest appeal ever -- for more than $5 billion -- for relief aid to Syrians across the country.
The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs predicted that nearly half of Syria's population will either have fled the country or need aid by the end of the year.
One woman at the Za'atri
camp told Jolie how her life was transformed when her neighbor in Syria
showed up at her door, missing a foot.
"I went to the
pharmacist, and I said, 'Hypothetically speaking, if my son or husband
had this injury, what should I do?' " the woman, Umm Mohammed, recalled.
With a proud smile, she said, "He taught me how to sterilize the wound ... and I started working."
Her smile disappears
when the conversation turns to her own situation at the refugee camp.
Umm Mohammed wants to return to her home in Syria, but the safety of her
family keeps her away.
There have been promises
to help from the international community to end the conflict in Syria,
but the reality is that nothing changes, she said.
"Why is no one standing
by the Syrian people?" she asked Jolie. "No one is helping us. They all
say they want to support us, but nothing is being done. They have
conferences and make statements, but it is worth nothing."
culled from www.cnn.com
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