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Gallery|Humanitarian Crises

How Iraq’s IDPs cope with the trauma of displacement

For millions of displaced Iraqis, life is not a permanent crisis.

Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
On the third day of the offensive on West Mosul, a child waves a white flag as he crosses no-man's land to escape ISIL controlled territory. Over the course of the battle to retake the city, hundreds of thousands of people fled their homes. [Tommy Trenchard/Al Jazeera]

By Tommy Trenchard

Published On 10 Sep 201710 Sep 2017

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Since the seizure of large parts of Iraq by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) in early 2014, over three million Iraqis have been driven from their homes. Many carry with them horrific stories of violence and suffering.

The displaced have featured heavily in international media coverage of Iraq over the past few years, yet that coverage tends to focus overwhelmingly on the darkest moments of the displacement experience; the trauma of living with memories of violence and loss, the hardships of camp life, the fear and uncertainty over the future.

That narrative is real, and important, but it is only a part of the story. It can obscure the fact that on most days, for millions of displaced Iraqis, life is not a permanent crisis. In between the moments of drama, days are filled with a mixture of chores, laughter, frustration, games and boredom.

Children in camps and improvised accommodation across the country show a phenomenal capacity for resilience, and for having fun in the face of adversity.

Destroyed buildings become play grounds, muddy streams become swimming pools, windswept tent cities become kite-flying arenas. In one IDP camp in the town of Hajj Ali, youngsters gather every evening in a newly constructed play room, while others challenge each other at pool or table football.

Many of Iraq’s displaced have endured unthinkable horrors. Yet to present them only as victims is to ignore the strength and resilience that enables them to overcome the challenges thrown at them,  and to make the most of a bad situation, one day at a time.

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Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Children who fled fighting in Mosul hug after arriving at Hamam al Alil reception area to the east of the city. From the edge of Mosul, the displaced are ferried in buses to Hamam al Alil. [Tommy Trenchard/Al Jazeera]
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Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Iraqi children, displaced by fighting between pro-government forces and ISIL in Mosul, cool off in a pool in between two IDP camps in Hamam al Alil, Iraq. [Tommy Trenchard/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
IDPs and members of the host community laugh as they play at a water point in Sharuja Polaq village, where local residents have welcomed dozens of displaced families. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
In a former chicken coop now housing over 100 people displaced by ISIL, one young girl kisses another on the cheek. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
In the months leading up to the Mosul offensive, families began moving away from ISIL-held territory around the Nineveh plains. Here, two girls play with skipping ropes in the recently constructed camp of Dibaga. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Doha Samir, 7, originally from Hai Zahar, in east Mosul, paints a flower at an Oxfam daycare facility in Hassansham IDP camp, to the east of the city. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
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Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Displaced children living in an abandoned farm building in Diyala province play beside a river as the sun sets. Alongside the IDP camps, many of Iraq's displaced live with friends, family, rent flats or live in abandoned buildings. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Two days after fleeing from her home in Mosul, a mother plays with her young child. Total strangers had offered up their home to the family. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
A girl, displaced by fighting between government forces and ISIL in Mosul, flies a kite in Khazir IDP camp, Iraq. [Tommy Trenchard/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Wafaa Derwesh, 39, shares a meal with her family in the half-built home they now live in in Kirkuk province. The family was displaced multiple times over the past two years. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Children displaced by ISIL play with a bicycle in the village of Bugali, where a local landowner allowed dozens of IDP families to take up residence in old farm buildings. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Two children, displaced by ISIL, play games with a pair of old glasses in their new home in the village of Sharuja Polaq, where dozens of IDP families have been welcomed by local residents. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
Ghazan Mahdi kisses his daughter on the cheek as the family rests in the new home he built for them in Diyala province after being displaced by ISIL. [Tommy Trenchard/Oxfam/Al Jazeera]
Iraqi displaced children/Please Do Not Use
A displaced girl leads her sister by the hand as they walk along a muddy track in Hamam al Alil, home to several large IDP camps for citizens of Mosul. [Tommy Trenchard/Al Jazeera]

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