The first time I walked through Dzaleka Refugee Camp in Malawi, I felt the weight of time. This camp was never meant to be permanent, yet decades later, tens of thousands of people still call it home. Children are born here. Young people grow up here. Families live entire lives here. For many, there is no going back. At the same time, host communities around the camp share the same pressures—scarce resources, climate shocks, and the daily challenge of building a future with too little support.
My name is Zahra Vaziri. I am from Iran. I serve as a UN Volunteer Associate Programme Officer with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Malawi. My role is to help ensure that humanitarian projects are not only implemented, but that they bring dignity, opportunity, and hope to both refugees and the communities that host them. I also make sure that the projects we design and fund are not only implemented but also carry meaning for the people who live here.