The horrors of war are best illustrated in the drawings.
In one sketch, a child details a helicopter and warplane firing over a tank shooting a missile.
Underneath, men fire guns at each other as a stick figure lies on the ground nearby.
The Syrian civil war has taken a massive psychological and physical toll on the most innocent of victims -- the children.
More than 2 million Syrian children have been afflicted by trauma, malnutrition or disease, the aid group Save the Children said in a report Wednesday.
The fighting has left one in three kids with injuries.
And it has decimated vaccination programs across the country, with about two-thirds of children in northern Syria without protection against preventable diseases.
Nowhere to hide
With more than 3 million buildings pummeled by attacks, children and parents across the country are running out of places to take cover.
About 80,000 Syrians are now sleeping in caves, parks or barns, Save the Children said.
Those slightly more fortunate pack into overcrowded apartments or homes with other families. But with the front lines of war shifting daily, no dwelling is spared from the bombings.
"Most of the houses were being hit. We had to stay in one room, all of us. The other rooms were being hit," 12-year-old Yasmine told the agency.
"The shelling was constant. ... I knew we could not move from that one room. There were 13 of us... crammed into one room. We did not leave that room for two weeks."
When her father finally ventured out, Yasmine's life changed forever.
"I watched my father leave, and watched as my father was shot outside our home," the girl said. "I started to cry, I was so sad. We were living a normal life, we had enough food. Now, we depend on others. Everything changed for me that day."
Traumatized by grief
Yasmine's ordeal is just one of countless stories of children struggling with the killings of family members.
A new study from Bahcesehir University in Turkey found three in every four Syrian children interviewed had lost a loved one because of the fighting, Save the Children said.
"I don't think there is a single child untouched by this war," a resident named Safa said. "Everyone has seen death. Everyone has lost someone."
Used as pawns

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