Salesians Support 100 Displaced in Lebanon
Funding comes from
Salesian Missions
(ANS – New Rochelle – May 30, 2025) – Salesians serving in Lebann have been able to provide emergency assistance for people afflicted by the war in Lebanon thanks to donor funding from Salesian Missions of New Rochelle. The Emergency Assistance to Internally Displaced People in Lebanon project provided aid as well as housing for 100 internally displaced people who escaped villages at the border with Israel and south Beirut.
These individuals
were hosted in the public school inside Don Bosco Hossoun’s center. The funding
from Salesian Missions helped those displaced settle inside the school premises
and be supported through the winter with kitchen equipment, blankets, and warm
clothes. The Salesians also were able to create a stock of medicines and
provide meals, water, medical and psycho-social support, and recreational
opportunities for youth.
One Salesian noted:
“The funding was essential to help us provide a safe and secure place for the
families who were displaced. It allowed Salesians to provide ongoing support
too. While those displaced remained at the Salesian center, staff were able to
monitor to provide ongoing social and psychological support and continue to
address urgent humanitarian needs, while fostering resilience and hope.”
One of the youths
supported was Omar Al-Doweil from Damascus, aged 6. In 2024, his family fled
Syria on foot, crossing the border into Lebanon in search of a better life in
Beirut. The sudden, stressful move profoundly impacted the young child, and the
bombings in Lebanon echoed Syria, reinforcing the trauma of displacement.
Months passed, and Al-Doweil withdrew from everyone, including his
family.
After the war ended
in January, Al-Doweil enrolled in Angels of Peace School, which was free and
near his home. Many Syrian refugees are barred from attending Lebanese public
schools, and private schools remain unaffordable for families like Al-Doweil’s.
The school staff —
particularly the psychologist and special education teachers— dedicated
themselves to helping the young boy heal.
The Salesian said,
“Today, Omar is vibrant and cheerful. He proudly recited the English alphabet
to demonstrate his progress in learning a new language. According to Noura, the
school’s director, Omar now speaks frequently and even cries when it’s time to
go home.”
Lebanon is dealing
with more than 1.5 million refugees who have fled the Syrian civil war,
according to the United Nations High Commissioner of Refugees. Salesians have
been working in Lebanon since 1952 and currently have two centers. The center
in Fidar has Don Bosco Technique and a youth center. The Salesian community in
Hossoun has an oratory and a reception house that has been housing Catholic
refugees since the start of the war in Syria.

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