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What was Ramadan like for Syrian refugees?

August 9, 2013 -- Updated 1410 GMT (2210 HKT)
Two young Syrian girls at the Za'atari refugee camp in Jordan paint decorations on walls of the community bathrooms. "Doing this project helps us keep our minds off fasting," says 12 year old Sula (right), a refugee from a village outside Dara'a. Two young Syrian girls at the Za'atari refugee camp in Jordan paint decorations on walls of the community bathrooms. "Doing this project helps us keep our minds off fasting," says 12 year old Sula (right), a refugee from a village outside Dara'a.
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Ramadan for Syrian refugees
Ramadan for Syrian refugees
Ramadan as a refugee
Fasting for faith
Life as a refugee during Ramadan
Ramadan for Syrian refugees
Ramadan for Syrian refugees
Iftar in Cairo
Iftar in Cairo
Help and health
Ramadan for Syrian refugees
Ramadan for Syrian refugees
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Syrians in Za'atari refugee camp in Jordan marked Ramadan in different ways
  • Many reflected on the lives they had in their home country
  • It is a difficult recent past and uncertain future for many

(CNN) -- The Muslim month of fasting, Ramadan, ended this week, marked across the Islamic world by the feasts of Eid el Fitr.

Traditionally a time spent with family at home, Ramadan has also become a time for reflection for many Syrians displaced by conflict in the country.

Struggling to survive in Syria

According to the UN Refugee Agency (UNCHR), the refugee camp at Za'atari in Jordan is home to around 145,000 Syrians who have fled the ongoing violence. Life there is difficult for its residents, and other Syrians who have found themselves living far from home across the region, from Beirut in Lebanon to Egypt's capital Cairo.

Photographers from the UNCHR captured the period on camera and discovered that, supported by their memories and dreams, those living in Za'atari could work through the struggles of life as a refugee and still observe the holy period.

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