NPR | With makeshift jump ropes and hide and seek, kids play to cope with crisis
"It helped remove our sadness," says 12-year-old Asma Bibi, who lives in a Rohingya refugee settlement in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
By Juliana Kim
This was originally published in NPR. Below is an excerpt from the article.
In a refugee camp in Bangladesh, children jump rope with chains of rubber bands. In wartime Gaza, kids fly kites made from discarded parachutes. And in Ukraine, youngsters tussle in make-believe war, imitating soldiers as the real conflict rages on.
These are some of the ways that children continue to create, imagine and seek joy even in the harshest circumstances. For them, play is not a simple pastime but a lifeline. Child psychologists say it helps them manage stress, express their emotions and regain a sense of control and normalcy when there’s little safety and stability.
“It helped remove our sadness,” says 12-year-old Asma Bibi, who lives in a Rohingya refugee settlement in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. She spoke in Rohingya and her interview was translated.
Bibi says her father and brother were both killed in their home country of Myanmar, where they were targets of ethnic cleansing. If it wasn’t for the small, colorful playroom at her camp, set up by BRAC, an international group focused on poverty, she says her mind “wouldn’t feel good.”