2008 Tour

A Refugee Camp in the Heart of the City

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Blog

Keep up with A Refugee Camp in the Heart of the City as it travels through Canada and the US on the Tour Blog.

Video

See the introductory video for A Refugee Camp in the Heart of the City

Interactive Map

Preview the exhibit through the new interactive map.

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Thank you to everryone who visited and supported A Refugee Camp in the Heart of the City, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières's (MSF) outdoor educatitonal exhibit. Through Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Santa Monica and San Diego, thousands of people came out to learn about the plight of 42 million people uprooted by war around the world.

There are still many ways to support MSF's work with refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs).

  • Donate: Support MSF's work in more than 60 countries around the world.
  • Plan a fundraiser: Raise awareness and support for MSF's work.
  • Share what you learned: Use the resources below to increase awareness of the 42 million people uprooted by war around the world.

Condition: Critical

Hundreds of thousands of people are on the run, fleeing a war that rages in eastern Congo, in the provinces of North and South Kivu. They are frightened. Many are sick or wounded. Others have been harassed or raped, or have had everything they own stolen. The people of the Kivus are in a critical condition. The destiny of everyone in this region is shaped by the war. The story of their struggle to survive needs to be told.

Facebook Status and Profile Picture

Change your Facebook profile picture to a photo of you in your refugee camp T-shirt with the "42 Million" message on it, OR use this image on the left.

Change your Facebook status message to say "Go to refugeecamp.org and learn about the 42 million people displaced by war."

About Refugees & Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)

Today, 42 million people around the world have fled armed conflicts and are searching for safety. They are children, women, and men living in temporary shelters, camps, or shanty towns, struggling to survive in new and often hostile environments. Learn more »

MSF's Work with Refugees and IDPs

Through podcasts, slideshows, and field news, view a snapshot of MSF's work in countries such as Somalia, Colombia, Sudan, Iraq, Hmong in Thailand, and Democratic Republic of Congo, where the world's highest number of refugees and IDPs live. Learn more »

Tour Blog Highlights

A Harsh Reality in a Refugee Camp

Posted November 8, 2008

Peninah Ndungu, a Kenyan national and an MSF clinical officer (similar to a physician's assistant), talks about one of the hardest situations she had to deal with while working in a refugee camp in Uganda.

 

Thinking Not in Numbers, But of Human Beings in DRC

Posted November 8, 2008

Luis Encinas, a Refugee Camp exhibit guide who coordinates operational strategies for seven projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), answers visitors' questions about what MSF is doing to help the vast numbers people wounded and displayed yet again in DRC.

 

Helping Civilian War Victims from Iraq

Posted November 3, 2008

MSF anesthesiologist Shobha Varthaman talks about MSF's programs in Sulemaniyah, northern Iraq, and Amman, Jordan, where surgeons perform maxillofacial, plastic, and orthopedic surgery on civilian victims of war.

 
 

About the Exhibit

Guided by MSF aid workers, visitors are asked to imagine that they are among the millions of people fleeing violence and persecution in, for example, Somalia, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, or Sudan.

The exhibit is made up of materials used by MSF in its emergency medical work around the world, including emergency refugee housing, a food distribution tent, water pump, health clinic, vaccination tent, therapeutic feeding center, and a cholera treatment center. It addresses questions such as:

  • Will I be safe?
  • What will I eat?
  • How do I find water?
  • Can I get medical care?
  • Where will I live?

Learn more about the issues refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) face with this interactive guide.

The exhibit is free and open to the public. If you are planning to come with a group of 15 or more please schedule a group visit for your city. Individuals are welcome without reservations.