(L-R): representatives of Enovos, Erny Huberty and Danny Bonifas, with Unicef representatives Nathalie Wohlfart and Paul Heber;

A long-time partner of Unicef-Luxembourg, Enovos presented a cheque for €5,000 to the humanitarian organisation, to support a project aimed at providing education for Syrian children, who have had to flee violence in their home country and seek refuge in Jordan.

Of the more than 650,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan, 336,000 are children. For 86,000 of them, school is only a distant memory. Many of them suffer from psychological trauma that has resulted in death of relatives, separation from their parents, or are terrified by constant shelling. In Jordan, thousands of children have found refuge and safety, but without education, they have no future.

Unicef ​​supports 200 Makani centres in Jordan, which allow children to return to school and fill in the accumulated gaps caused by the forced interruption of their school education. Each Makani centre is a place of education, learning, security, friendship and play, where social workers offer children sports and play activities and help them overcome their traumas. UNICEF's day-to-day work in Jordan aims to provide children - beyond the security found in Jordan - with a vision for the future.