Syria's nearly four-year civil war has exacted a massive toll on children, who have been displaced en-masse, exposed to airstrikes and shelling as well as arbitrary arrest and torture, the United Nations says.
"I have heard fighting before," says 10-year-old Yasmin Lutfi, her soiled pink T-shirt adorned with a picture of a sparkling butterfly, her hair cropped close.
"Sometimes I have dreams about them (Isis) taking me away," she says.
For the past month, Kurdish fighters have battled Isis in the predominantly Kurdish city of Kobane, about 10km from the camp. The fighting is bitter, now morphing into a campaign of street fighting, perhaps approaching its final act.
An estimated 180,000 people have scattered in the face of the onslaught, seeking refuge in Turkey.
Jihadists launched a concerted assault on the city centre at the weekend, bolstered by tanks driven in from an Isis stronghold east of Kobane over the past few days. Kobane is a focal point of United States airstrikes targeting jihadist forces. Out-gunned Kurdish fighters reportedly repelled the assault, but the fighting was furious.
"It is not just Daash that has scared them," says Bakr Ahmed, who fled Kobane's environs with his children 15 days ago. "First we had problems with the Free Syrian Army, then with Jabhat al-Nusra. Now we have Daash."
In this camp of dour grey tents, the latest developments in the bloody battle for Kobane quickly spread. The children here are growing up enveloped by all host of brutality.
"My children should not know these things," says Sheikh, as a small child nearby beats a fluorescent yellow soft toy against the ground.
One photograph, viewed on a Kurdish militia member's phone, depicted a man stripped naked and hand-cuffed. Dozens of knives were stuck - most embedded up to the handle - into the mutilated corpse.
"These children have been in a war, and there is only one psychologist here," says Marih Sanli, a Turkish doctor providing medical treatment from a makeshift clinic in the camp. "There is no food for them, no books or schools. And they are living in a camp where you wouldn't even keep animals."
A small child wearing a Big Bird T-shirt licks melted chocolate off a wrapper while others kick around a soccer ball. A chill wind blows through the camp, the sun sinking.
Winter is approaching and most of the children say they do not know when they will return to their homes.
For 9-year-old Ahmed Bozan, his teeth chipped and his face freckled, the Isis fighters are frightening. He has heard about the decapitations.
"I want to kill them all," he says.
Iraq begs for help as Isis nears capital
Iraqi officials issued a desperate plea for America to provide ground troops, as heavily armed Isis jihadists came within striking distance of Baghdad.
Amid reports that Isis forces have advanced as far as Abu Ghraib, a town that is effectively a suburb of Baghdad, a senior local governor claimed that up to 10,000 fighters from the movement were now poised to assault the capital.
The warning came from Sabah al-Karhout, the president of the provisional council of Anbar Province, the vast desert region to the west of Baghdad.
Were the province to fall completely into militant hands, it would give Isis a perfect springboard from which to mount an all-out assault on Baghdad where 1500 US troops already act as mentors.