Are there occasions when proudly nonpartisan diplomats can 鈥 or should 鈥 speak out? For some, the moment arrived when events in the U.S. mirrored those they were criticizing in foreign countries.聽
What would you grab if you had to flee your home?
Amid , it鈥檚 worth pondering. By 2018, more than 70 million people had been forcibly displaced 鈥撀燼 record, and a sharp increase from 43 million in 2009. About 41 million were displaced in their country, while nearly 26 million are refugees. Many leave with virtually nothing. And in 2020, they might pose another question: Have we been forgotten?聽
Even before the pandemic, the refugee welcome mat was disappearing. (The top host countries in 2018 were Turkey, Pakistan, Uganda, Sudan, and Germany.) And amid a tumultuous 2020, focus has been only intermittent on the needs of those for whom perilous paths into the unknown seemed the only answer to violence, war, and famine on their doorstep.聽
But many people are working to show they do, in fact, remember.
From Amman, Jordan, where brothers Mogtaba and Ahmed Fadol learned to sew so they could give 1,000 face masks to ,聽to Cambridge, England, individuals and groups are helping and donating.聽Refugees are paying it forward: In Turkey, Afghans arefor hospitals, while refugees in the United Kingdom are frontline pandemic workers.
Ivoirian artist O'Pl茅rou Grebet, profiled last year in the Monitor,聽is joining in with an emoji of a heart formed by two hands that appears alongside refugee hashtags. 鈥淩efugees are people just like us,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 try to showcase diversity so we can better understand each other and achieve greater solidarity.鈥