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See the Children Caught in Europe’s Refugee Crisis

3 minute read

They travel in groups, crossing the border between Serbia and Hungary on foot, following a railway that will bring them to a makeshift camp where they will find respite before continuing on toward Austria, Germany or Sweden.

Among the thousands of refugees fleeing the devastating war in their native Iraq and Syria are hundreds of children—some as young as one month. “Children are the real victims of conflict,” said Muhammed Muheisen, Associated Press’ chief photographer for the Middle East, Pakistan and Afghanistan. “They have no idea what’s happening.”

Ever since he started at AP in 2001, the photographer has turned his lens on children, highlighting their plight as adults wage wars or struggle in extreme poverty. In 2008, Muheisen decided to make children the sole focus of his feature work—he photographed young Afghan refugees in 2013, and last month he was in the dusty camps along the Jordanian-Syrian border, where childhood is nonexistent.

READ MORE: Heartbreaking Photos of Syrian Refugees and Their Newborns

Now, as Europe faces its largest refugee crisis since World War II, Muheisen is once again focusing on these young victims. He arrived in Budapest on Sept. 10, immediately making his way to the border town of Roszke in southern Hungary.

There, he met a Syrian couple traveling with their 1-month-old daughter Roa’a. They fled Syria in hope of a better life in a “safe land,” they told him. “They are so exhausted, they have no idea what’s next,” he said.

In Muheisen’s photograph, the couple is seen hiding from the Hungarian policemen. “They’ve heard that they will have to give their fingerprints if [they’re stopped],” he said. “And they believe that if they give them, they won’t be able to go to Germany or other places in Europe.”

READ NEXT: Inside the Syrian Refugee Camps Where Childhood Doesn’t Exist

Another woman told Muheisen that she had left her war-torn country with only one thought in mind: ensure the safety of her two children.

For these kids, the road is especially trying. “I ran into a young boy who looked traumatized,” said Muheisen. “They walk for a hundred meters and sit and rest. I don’t think they have a clue of what’s happening.”

Some of the children in Muheisen’s photographs are smiling but, he said, that’s because these trying circumstances have become their new normal. “They’ve been on this journey for a while,” he said.

Hungary Migrants refugees children
Syrian refugee Raed Alabdou, 24, holds his one-month old daughter Roa'a, while he and his wife hide in a field not to be seen by Hungarian policemen, after they crossed the Serbian-Hungarian border near Roszke, southern Hungary, on Sept. 11, 2015. Muhammed Muheisen—AP
Hungary Migrants refugees children
Bara'ah Alhammadi, 10, a Syrian refugee, is carried on the back of her father as they make their way along a railway track after they crossed the Serbian-Hungarian border near Roszke, on Sept. 11, 2015. Muhammed Muheisen—AP
Hungary Migrants refugees children
A man carrying his daughter on his shoulder walks on a railway toward a makeshift camp for asylum seekers in Roszke, on Sept. 10, 2015. Muhammed Muheisen—AP
Hungary Migrants refugees children
Syrian refugee Hussein Sbaih, 18, center, carries his cousin Saifuallah, 7, whose legs are broken, after they crossed the Serbian-Hungarian border near Roszke, on Sept. 11, 2015.Muhammed Muheisen—AP
Hungary Migrants refugees children
Syrian refugee child Zaid Hussein, 4, is held by his mother while sitting inside their tent at a makeshift camp for asylum seekers in Roszke, on Sept. 11, 2015. Muhammed Muheisen—AP
Hungary Migrants refugees children
Iraqi refugee Umm Fadil tends to her crying son Ahmad, 41 days, while resting by a railway track after they crossed the Serbian-Hungarian border near Roszke, on Sept. 11, 2015. Muhammed Muheisen—AP
Hungary Migrants refugees children
Syrian refugee child Jana Makkiyeh, 3, whose family comes from Damascus, Syria, holds a teddy bear while standing near her family's tent at a makeshift camp for asylum seekers in Roszke, on Sept. 10, 2015. Muhammed Muheisen—AP
Hungary Migrants refugees children
A Syrian refugee child looks out of a bus that will take him and his family to the center for asylum seekers near Roszke, on Sept. 11, 2015. Muhammed Muheisen—AP

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