Syrian orphans who fled Aleppo find new home

Syrian orphans from Aleppo, pass time in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Samar, 11, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, crawls in an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans Ali Shibli, left and Abu Bak Shibli, right, from Aleppo, attend a math class in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans from Aleppo, sit in a circle in their room, as they read the Quran, Islam's holy book, at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Badr Shelhawi, left, and Amer Tarkaji, Syrian orphans from Aleppo, sit in an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Samar, 11, last name not available because she was abandoned, sits in a circle in their room with other Syrian orphans from Aleppo, as they read the Quran, Islam's holy book, at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Under the watchful eye of an instructor, left, Batool Lababidi, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, stands outside her room at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans from Aleppo, attend a math class in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Noor Ghanem, 13, sits in a circle in her room with other Syrian orphans from Aleppo, as they read the Quran, Islam's holy book, at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans from Aleppo, sit in a circle in their room, as they play at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Noor Ghanem, 13, left, helps other Syrian orphans from Aleppo, as they study at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Batool Lababidi, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, stands outside her room at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

Syrian orphans who fled Aleppo find new home

Syrian orphans from Aleppo, pass time in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Samar, 11, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, crawls in an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans Ali Shibli, left and Abu Bak Shibli, right, from Aleppo, attend a math class in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans from Aleppo, sit in a circle in their room, as they read the Quran, Islam's holy book, at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Badr Shelhawi, left, and Amer Tarkaji, Syrian orphans from Aleppo, sit in an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Samar, 11, last name not available because she was abandoned, sits in a circle in their room with other Syrian orphans from Aleppo, as they read the Quran, Islam's holy book, at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Under the watchful eye of an instructor, left, Batool Lababidi, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, stands outside her room at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans from Aleppo, attend a math class in the basement of an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Noor Ghanem, 13, sits in a circle in her room with other Syrian orphans from Aleppo, as they read the Quran, Islam's holy book, at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Syrian orphans from Aleppo, sit in a circle in their room, as they play at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Noor Ghanem, 13, left, helps other Syrian orphans from Aleppo, as they study at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
Batool Lababidi, a Syrian orphan from Aleppo, stands outside her room at an orphanage in Jarablus, northern Syria, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. Nearly 50 children orphaned by the Syrian war escaped the hell that was their hometown of Aleppo as government forces moved in under a hail of fire. In the year and half since, the children and their instructors o, have been uprooted twice more. It has finally landed a small house in the sleepy northern town of Jarablus, which was once a hub for Islamic State militants along the border with Turkey but has been governed by a Turkey-backed administration since 2016. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)