Hiba, 30, ran a small dairy and cheese farm outside Idlib, northwestern Syria. Since 2020, her work has provided modest income for herself and her four children. As a single mother, she often struggled with business losses she couldn’t explain, but she kept going.
Then, in February 2023, devastating earthquakes struck.
The morning everything changed
“On the morning of the earthquake, I woke up to the sounds of screams and destruction all around,” Hiba recalls. “The scene was catastrophic. I lost several livestock, and most of my equipment was destroyed. At that moment, I felt an overwhelming despair. Everything I had worked for years to build was gone, and I didn’t know how to recover.”
In Syria, where 90% of people live below the poverty line after years of conflict and displacement, the earthquake was yet another devastating blow. Thousands of small businesses like Hiba’s were destroyed in seconds. Today, amid ongoing political transitions, dwindling aid, and rising numbers of returnees, Syria’s recovery faces immense challenges.
Yet, caring pushed Hiba forward. She had to provide for her family.