Newspapers and local stations report on É«ÏãÊÓƵ faculty member aiding refugees in Greece

Medical students Allison Hockman and Tess Strand pack baby carriers with freshman Marissa Laramie
Medical students Allison Hockman and Tess Strand pack baby carriers with freshman Marissa Laramie

Every day, more than 9,000 Syrian refugees arrive in Greece, 30 percent of whom are children. Often, parents are forced to carry their children and babies in their arms along the journey. On February 4, a group of É«ÏãÊÓƵundergraduate and medical students packed hundreds of wearable baby carriers that Jennifer Gunderman, M.P.H., assistant lecturer, will hand out to refugees arriving in Athens.

Gunderman is a volunteer with , which provides refugee families with baby and child carriers for an easier and safer journey to their asylum destination. In the past month, Carry the Future volunteers have distributed and personally fit more than 3,000 baby carriers in Greece. These carriers make a real difference in refugees’ lives by keeping children warm, safe and united with their parents on their journey, as well as freeing parents’ hands to carry other belongings.

 

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