Peace, please (6.5 of 6)
I was in touch with Fahim today to find out how he's doing; he's so thankful for everyone's good wishes and prayers from this story. After getting the news in January that his reunification
Black pepper (6 of 6)
Athens, GreeceWhen Saanya and I were in Lesbos, we got a Facebook message from Fahim with the ultimate news: he got a call that day that his papers had been approved
Power (5 of 6)
Athens, GreeceAfter spending a few days with Fahim, seeing his caring ways towards the kids and his charming disposition, I wanted to ask him what was really on my mind: doesn’t he ever think
G-O-A-L! (4 of 6)
Athens, GreeceThe boys at the Skaramangas refugee camp flock to Fahim as soon as they see him; first a couple, then more, by the time we reach his ‘caravan’ - a 10x20
"99% chance we're going to die" (3 of 6)
Athens, GreeceFahim left Afghanistan on January 1, 2015, and traveled with a smuggler through Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, then Greece. When I asked about the trip, he just kept repeating
"My goal is my mother" (2 of 6)
Athens, Greece“I lived in Kabul. I have a big family - mother, father, four brothers and two sisters; one sister is in Norway. I left Afghanistan because I was a famous player and
Fahim (1 of 6)
We met Fahim the first evening we arrived in Athens. He is a professional soccer player, and used to play for the national team in Afghanistan. That was before he started getting
Alhumdulillah (6 of 6)
Raghad is developing the idea of Mozaic Kitchen, an opportunity for refugees to earn money by preparing and selling their specialty dishes at bazaars and through catering
Setting the table (5 of 6)
I was raised in a family where my father would refuse to sit at the dining table unless we have some needy person sitting with us. Even if there was nobody, he would call the guard outside
Keefek ya ummi (4 of 6)
In Syria, Mother’s Day is on March 21st; it was two days before I met with Raghad in her home for this interview. She was telling me that she had received so many happy mother’s day messages from refugees.
"Quran is the fuel to my engine" (3 of 6)
Raghad was born and raised in Damascus, Syria. She studied agricultural engineering in college and worked with bees and honey production.
Caring, like family (2 of 6)
Often, Raghad drives the truck herself picking up donated furniture to furnish an apartment for a newly arriving refugee family. She cleans, sorts, unpacks, organizes
"If we don't, who will" (1 of 6)
Raghad Bushnaq has been helping people in need in informal ways for at least a dozen years, but when refugees started arriving in the Washington D.C. area in large numbers in April 2016
"It's in my blood" (6 of 6)
“I’m very happy, very very happy,” Nader tells me when I ask him what it feels like to make his first wedding dress in the US. “If you take a blood test from me, you’ll
The dress (5 of 6)
The wedding dress in slightly off white lace with floral motifs and tiny beads - for one, a symbol of love; for another, a chance to stitch a new life.
Birds (4 of 6)
Omama and I chatted after she had changed back into jeans and a denim jacket; I wanted to know, of course, how she met her fiance. She giggles and tells me
Omama, the bride (3 of 6)
Omama, 23, inched her way from the bedroom wearing her wedding dress for the first time. She posed in the living room light, turning this way and that, peering
Leaving Homs, finding home (2 of 6)
Nader and his family are originally from Homs, Syria. Nader had a lingerie business in Homs since 1995; he owned a factory that employed over 150 people.
Nader, the dressmaker (1 of 6)
I first met Nader, 42, when KindWorks, a nonprofit I help lead, organized a welcome dinner for recently arrived refugees. Nader and his wife Rasha, 36,
30 refugee stories, an introduction
An introduction to this years '30 days 30 deeds' blog, focusing on 30 stories of refugees I've had the privilege of getting to know, in Greece and in our own community, and the people who are helping them feel at home.Video: George Kolotov