yassin: yeah. they call me mama. mama elaph. >> pelley: and you've got more than 40 of them. >> yassin: yeah, and i'm very proud. >> pelley: fatima is one of them. in aleppo, shrapnel lacerated her liver and broke her back. "life was never the same" she told us. after a year in the hospital, she is now here with her brothers, hamza and abbas. it must've been very hard for you to walk across the border. "my uncle carried me on his back," fatima told us. "i was on crutches and i couldn't climb up and down the mountains." she said that they were in the hands of smugglers and walked for hours. it took several tries to get across, and once, they were fired on by turkish border guards. their mother, unable to care for them, gave the children to the orphanage. her father had been killed in aleppo. some of these children you care for have not only lost a parent, they've seen that parent killed. >> yassin: yes. many of them, actually. >> pelley: how are the children dealing with these horrors? >> yassin: actually, i think, like, god gav