They should be in school, but like thousands of other children in the war-torn Syrian province of Idlib, brothers Jawad and Yazan are forced to work every day to support their family.

This is no regular job, however. The two boys, aged eight and 15, are gravediggers in one of the deadliest places on earth.

“I help my father when someone comes needing to bury someone, so we dig the grave with him then we fill it with earth, clean it and everything. We water the trees and flowers and everything that dad asks us to do,” says Jawad, the youngest of the two.

“I am not afraid of working here because they are dead, may God have mercy on their souls and our souls too,” he adds, in an interview conducted by Save the Children.

The boys work with their father Ghassan in the graveyard, on the outskirts of Idlib. More than 500 people have been killed over the last two months in a Russian and Syrian government-led assault on the last rebel-held province including 130 children.

Syrian government offensive in Idlib Show all 8 1 /8 Syrian government offensive in Idlib Syrian government offensive in Idlib Syrians, including a member of the White Helmets civil defence rescue teams, run for cover during an air strike by pro-regime forces on the market town of Kfar Ruma in Syria's southwestern Idlib province, on May 30, 2019. - Regime forces and their Russian allies have over the past three months escalated bombardment of Syria's last major jihadist bastion in the province of Idlib and adjacent areas AFP/Getty Syrian government offensive in Idlib Syrian rescue teams and civilians search for survivors amid the rubble in a freshly bombarded area following a reported air strike by regime forces and their allies on the market town of Kfar Ruma in Syria's southwestern Idlib province, on May 30, 2019. - Regime forces and their Russian allies have over the past three months escalated bombardment of Syria's last major jihadist bastion in the province of Idlib and adjacent areas. AFP/Getty Syrian government offensive in Idlib Syrian rescue teams and civilians search for survivors amid the rubble in a freshly bombarded area following a reported air strike by regime forces and their allies on the market town of Kfar Ruma in Syria's southwestern Idlib province, on May 30, 2019. - Regime forces and their Russian allies have over the past three months escalated bombardment of Syria's last major jihadist bastion in the province of Idlib and adjacent areas AFP/Getty Syrian government offensive in Idlib Syrian rescue teams and civilians look for survivors in a heavily damaged area following a reported air strike by regime forces and their allies on the market town of Kfar Ruma in Syria's southwestern Idlib province, on May 30, 2019. - Regime forces and their Russian allies have over the past three months escalated bombardment of Syria's last major jihadist bastion in the province of Idlib and adjacent areas. AFP/Getty Syrian government offensive in Idlib This photo provided by the Syrian Civil Defense White Helmets, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows Civil Defense workers searching for victims under the rubble of a destroyed building after an airstrike by Syrian government forces, Maaret al-Numan, a town in south Idlib, Syria, Thursday, May 30, 2019. Rescue workers and activists say at least five, including three from the same family, have been killed in Syria's last rebel stronghold when warplanes targeted the building they live in, leveling it. AP Syrian government offensive in Idlib A Syrian girl cries as she runs for cover during an air strike by pro-regime forces on the market town of Kfar Ruma in Syria's southwestern Idlib province, on May 30, 2019. - Regime forces and their Russian allies have over the past three months escalated bombardment of Syria's last major jihadist bastion in the province of Idlib and adjacent areas. AFP/Getty Syrian government offensive in Idlib Syrians run for cover during an air strike by pro-regime forces on the market town of Kfar Ruma in Syria's southwestern Idlib province, on May 30, 2019. - Regime forces and their Russian allies have over the past three months escalated bombardment of Syria's last major jihadist bastion in the province of Idlib and adjacent areas. AFP/Getty Syrian government offensive in Idlib A man rescues a child while members of the Syrian civil defence known as the White Helmets search the area for survivors following following a reported air strike by regime forces and their allies on Maaret al-Noman in Syria's southwestern Idlib province. AFP/Getty

Airstrikes have emptied towns and villages in the province. Many schools have been damaged by fighting or are being used as shelters. Those that remain open and functional can only accommodate up to 300,000 of the 650,000 school-age children, according to the charity.

The family are among more than a million people displaced from other parts of the country to Idlib. Ghassan and his family are originally from Aleppo province. They fled before the government’s offensive to recapture the city, during which their house was destroyed. Now they live in rented accommodation.

Eight-year-old Jawad* and 15-year-old Yazan pictured in the cemetery where they work as grave diggers. They also clean and water the graves (Khalil Ashawi/Save the Children)

Despite their young ages, the boys have already witnessed so much. The family lived under Isis rule for a short time, a period that still haunts the boys.

“During the war we started to see bodies hanging at [public] squares, some with their heads chopped off. [There was] another woman who was killed by stoning, and a man who was thrown off the building. This is how life has become, disaster,” says Yazan.

“The hardest thing is seeing the bodies on the ground, the faces of the innocent, dead people, to see a man chopped up to pieces, carried away in sacks. This is the hardest thing we witnessed,” he adds.

The work is difficult and dull. They earn a little money from people who visit the graves, but it is hardly enough.

“I don’t play with anything here. I just sit with my father, and if someone comes to the graves, I fill water for him and help. If no one came or if they don’t give us money, we ask if they would give us a tip, if they did not [tip us], how would we live?”

Fifteen-year-old Yazan digs a grave in the cemetery where he works with his brother on the outskirts of Idlib (Khalil Ashawi/Save the Children) (Khalil Ashawi / Save the Children)

Ghassan would like to send his sons to school, but he has six children to look after. He cannot afford the clothes and supplies they need.

“Our situation cannot allow for schools or the like,” he says. “If today he wants the money for a notebook, I’d say to him that I don’t have it. Where could I get money from? There are younger siblings who need to eat and drink, water.”