Four-month-old Abdul Rahman, propped up on pillows on a blue blanket in his family's tent. Two-year-old Walid, striking a boxer's pose in the centre of the mat.
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Nine-year-old Ranim, who has never known peace, her bare feet poking out from beneath an embroidered red dress.
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Nine photos of child refugee for nine years of war.
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Reuters assigned Syrian photographer Khalil Ashawi to illustrate World Refugee Day, which was on Saturday.
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 Abdul Rahman al-Fares, a 4-month-old displaced Syrian baby from south Idlib countryside.
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He went to the Atmeh camp for displaced people on the Syrian-Turkish border, where families have been sheltering since 2011 from a conflict that has made half of Syrians homeless.
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He illustrated each of the war's nine years with a simple picture: a refugee child born in that year. Each poses in a tent, each alone, apart from eight-year-old Jumana and her twin brother Farhan.
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"Every kid represents a year in the uprising. Every kid narrates a story and they each have their unique story of the war," Ashawi explained.
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"These kids don't know the meaning of a home, some don't know or have forgotten that a house has a wall and a door."
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For those children old enough to talk, Ashawi asked each the same question: what is home?
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Six-year-old Rawan, in a patterned dress, said she still remembers her house "built in the old fashioned way" in south Idlib.
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"A house for me is a place where my friends and family are. I brought my toys with me but it's not nice here at all," she said.
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 "A tent is not a house, because it might catch fire and it might fly with the wind."
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Reuters
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