In Sweden – A Million Stories http://refugeelives.eu Refugee lives Thu, 08 Oct 2020 09:49:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.16 http://refugeelives.eu/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/walking-128-100x100.png In Sweden – A Million Stories http://refugeelives.eu 32 32 I didn’t think there was another country that I could manage to live in http://refugeelives.eu/2018/12/27/i-didnt-think-there-was-another-country-that-i-could-manage-to-live-in/ Thu, 27 Dec 2018 10:43:26 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3725 Continue reading "I didn’t think there was another country that I could manage to live in"

]]>
Male, 29 years old, from Lattekia Syrien, now living in Sweden Malmö.

I’m from Lattekia in Syria and my whole family are there.
I don’t know how where I will start my story, but I shall tell what happened exactly and what made me flee from my country. I was living in Syria in Lattekia, and I was working and it was a normal life, together with my family. It was right after I finished my obligatory military service, and at this time it was my plan to get married and to work and live a normal life. Then the events began in Syria. There were demonstrations, and people wanted freedom and they started to express their opinions, and we were with them. Not at first, but after some time we joined them, and said the same things. Our situation was very bad, especially the young boys who finish their military service and their studies. They didn’t have a future. The families are not capable of supporting their children. The families are living from the help of their children, and they live sparingly. They only pay the rent and buy food, and don’t have much extra money to help their children and support their future. Everyone who was 20 years old and finished the high school he joins the military and finish it. After he finishes the military then his life can begin: to work and establish an economy for a good future, so he can marry for example when he is 25, 26 or 30 years old. Before I went to the military, I told my family that I wanted to get engaged, and when I was still in the military, short time before finishing it, I got engaged. When I finished my military service I started to work a lot to collect money for me and my fiancé’s future.
But when the events started happening and the problems began, some people stopped working, people were afraid of what would happen. Every day something new happened and the events developed quickly. In the beginning it was only demonstrations, and then also killings, and then terrorism. No one understood what was going to happen.
One day after dinner, my friend asked me if I would like to go for a walk, and we did. I walked. It was only five minutes walk from my home. I saw my friend and then, when we were walking together, the police came and took me. They didn’t say why. They put a cover for my eyes, so I didn’t know where I was going, and they put me in the car. They took me to one of their departments, where they held me captured, and after 6 days they moved me to the prison, and I was there for two months and 16 days. The first 6 days were very difficult, but after they took me to the prison it was like a normal condition in a prison. In the first 6 days they beat me, threw cold water on us, and I was tied up with my hands over my head to the wall for two days, and there was no food… Violence and violations. After 6 days, during which they could not find anything on me – I was only walking around outside with my friend. I didn’t do anything against the government, they moved me to the prison. When I got out of prison finally I didn’t have left any hope and the goals that I was thinking about before. I could not think about anything besides the problems and how we could overcome this, so that we can start our life again. People started to give me advice to travel. But whereto should I travel? I didn’t think there was another country that I could manage to live in. We don’t like traveling actually. Maybe most Syrians, I think, don’t like traveling, and actually I didn’t even have a passport before. I made my first passport after I got out of prison. I never ever thought of traveling outside of my country. I was happy with my life in my city Lattekia. I never thought of leaving, eventhough I know the situation before was not so good politically, educationally, and with regards to freedom, democracy, job opportunities for everyone and not just for certain groupings/tribes of people and the fact that it was difficult to establish something. There was a lot of inequality.
But after what happened, I found myself in a situation where I didn’t know what to do, except do as they adviced me to. I searched where I could travel, and I found out that Libya could be a good option. In Libya there were jobs and there was not war. We talked with some people in Libya that my family in-law knew, to know about the living situation there. They said, come here. You can easily get a job and a place to live, and its safe here.
So I decided to go, because here in Lattekia life became hard, and it seemed that the situation was getting worse and worse. Again and again people were arrested without reason. If your age was between 18-25 or -30, then the risk that you would be arrested was higher than if you were older in age, because they were more suspicious of young people with regards to being associated with the occupation and to be doing something against the government. So for this reason I was a target. My age also played a role in all of this. Furthermore they could demand me to go back to the military, especially because I just recently finished my military service. I finished it 1,5 months before the uprising began in Syria. And I would be amongst the men who the military would first call on when they needed more soldiers.
So I travelled to Lebanon, and took a flight to Egypt. In Egypt I stayed for 10 days and then I went to Libya. I stayed with a family until I found a shared apartment with other young men. I started to work. In the beginning, I didn’t know anyone, and therefore the first 4-5 months my job situation was not so good. I maybe worked 7 days in a months. I took any work I could get. One day I would work with painting, the next day I would lay tiles, and another day as an electrician. Later, after I got to know many people, I found a fulltime job, and eventually my situation became better and I started to be self-employed as an electrician.
Afterwards problems also began in Libya. Not just because of the president and the unstable political situation, but also problems between the people. Groupings with weapons started to threaten people, demand money and kidnap people. At one point, during an attempt to flee Libya, I met with one of these groupings.
I went with some friends and we were thinking to flee across the sea to Europe. I was actually against the idea of fleeing over the Mediterranean Sea. My situation was ok concerning work, so my opinion in the beginning was, that there was no reason to risk my life and maybe die in the sea. But at the same time, I had found out that it was impossible for me to get family reunification with my wife. I had to have Libyan citizenship in order to do that. I eventually changed my mind and decided to flee to Europe because I wanted to reunite with my wife. We had been apart for a long time. And also because of the situation in Libya that was getting more and more unstable. I thought, if the problems in Libya would continue or even get worse, then it would not be safe for me. Maybe someone would come and kidnap me or shoot me. I was a stranger in this country, so I felt there was a bigger danger for me. Many people talked about the subject of fleeing, and I knew many people who had already left. Finally I was convinced that I had to do it.
I paid 1000 dollar to go on a boat. We agreed on everything with the smuggler. We should wait in an empty building before getting on the boat. We stayed for one day and no one came. On the second day a person came and assured us that they were taking care of the arrangements. Then the third day came and still no one came to say that the boat was ready. Everyday they said “soon” or “tomorrow”. Finally they told us “tomorrow at noon”, but the time passed, and still no boat. We got more and more worried. Were we going or not? Then a grouping entered the building. They were carrying weapons and they began to beat us. They didn’t spare anyone – the young and the old. There were also women and children, and it was difficult for us to witness this, because we could not do anything, for they were pointing towards us with Kalashnikovs. We could not hit them or defend ourselves, because they would likely kill us. I could sense by their characters that they were crazy and unpredictable people. They had long hair and a kind of scary figure, as if they were on drugs. And their clothes was dirty.
They demanded all of our money and our passports. I gave them 1000 dollars. Everyone gave them 1000 dollars each, and some people also gave them their passport. They also came to me and said: give me your passport. I said I didn’t have one. I had one, but I didn’t want to give it to them. Enough, I mean, they could take my money, but not my passport. They escaped quickly after they got what they wanted.
This assault, it think, was of course planned with the smugglers. No one could know that we were here in the empty building, so they probably were cooperating with the smugglers.
Children were crying and people were confused about what to do now. Some people said lets go to another neighborhood and try to find another way to flee. Some people even said they wanted to stay there to wait for the smugglers and get their money back, but I didn’t care about the money. The important thing was that we were alright. We had to get out of here quickly, because maybe the group would come back and kill us.
At last I left the area with a group of people, and we arranged with another smuggler to get to Europe. I was going to travel with three families, and we stayed with the smuggler in his home while he was trying to arrange a boat. After three days he finally said to us that tomorrow there was a boat for us. The next day we went out early in the morning when it was still dark outside, so that the police would not see us. We moved along some small houses at the beach, where we could hide behind. It was frightening actually. We ran quickly, then stopped to hide and then ran a little again, and we continued like that. Finally we arrived at the shore. There was a small boat that they used to bring people out to the bigger boat, and people started to get onboard. We sent women, children and families out to the big boat first. There were many people, and just before it was our turn to go they said that they could not take more people on the boat. And we were soaked. And we just had to go back. The sun was also risen and we had to get out of here quickly. And they said run, run quickly! We didn’t understand what to do, they just said run… we didn’t know where to. We moved quickly along the shore and our clothes became very dirty and totally wet. We arrived at an empty house where they put us in, and we should pretend that we were living in this house so that no one would be suspicious. Later they moved us to another area. We should stay in an empty and apartment without light and electricity until the next day. The next day we went again to the shore very early in the morning, and this time we succeed in getting onboard. This boat was called the Giraffe. It had three floors, and we were 750 people on it. It was an old boat, and it didn’t seem safe enough. It could easily sink, but we question it that much, because we were destined to go. We sold all our things in Libya, we were finally here and we didn’t want to go back, so we went.
Everytime a person was standing up and walking for example to go to the toilet, then everything was moving. It’s very difficult when people are moving, because it makes an unbalance of the weight, and the boat moves with them. Maybe the boat could turn over at any moment. It was difficult for the captain to sail the boat with so many people. The captain was a refugee from amongst us. He was actually not educated as a captain. His brother was a captain, so he called his brother some times to ask for advice on how to sail. We sailed for nine hours, and during all this time people were afraid. Some people threw up and some cried Every time the boat moved a little bit, everyone screamed – the young and the old. If the boat overturned then what could we do? We would be helpless, because not everyone had a life west. There were not enough wests for everyone, so we gave the wests to the women and children. So for nine hours we were only thinking when will we arrive, and we were also worried to lose our way. I was thinking, Oh God please let the captain lead us in the right direction. It could be that he unknowingly was sailing to Tunisia or I don’t know where, so we were all worried.
We saw a ship coming with the Italian flag on it. Short time before one of the passengers talked with someone from the Italian cost guard. He had with him a kind of GPS or walkie-talkie that he could use to contact some people. He talked with him in English, and then another passenger assisted him because he could speak in Italian. They told the coast guard that we were 750 people, circa 250-300 of them children, and that our boat could overturn at any moment. They must have sent this ship.

When people saw the ship they became crazy and everyone began to sheer, move and stand up, and many wanted to jump in the water in order to be one of the first people to reach the warship. It was dangerous, because we were 750 people and if everyone would jump then the boat would overturn for sure before the warship got to us. During the trip, I had gathered with some friends, about 12 persons, and we tried to keep people calm and gain order on the ship, because we were so many people, and there were no rules on the ship. People only got on this boat, but no one established some rules. It was necessary to have some rules for the sake of everyone’s safety. So for example, if a person was moving too much then we prevented him from doing so, so that we could ensure the safety. This went well for nine hours. I mean some people transgressed the rules, but overall it was ok, but when this warship came, and everyone wanted to move and get up, then it was impossible to keep people calm.

The ship stopped at a distance and sent small boats to take us to it. The coast guard also shouted to us that we should keep calm and don’t jump in the water or anything like that. There was also a danger to them if our boat overturned then they could go down with us because they were so close to us. After about 10-15 people jumped the rest of the people listened and stayed back.
When we arrived at the ship of the coast guard, they collected our belts in order not to kill ourselves with them. We sailed for two days. It took so long because they were sailing around and looking out for more ships to help. There were no food for us, but no one was thinking about it, we were only relieved that we were safe and thinking about arriving in Italy. After one day in the ship we were so cold. No one had with them warm clothes, so they gave us silver-blankets. I think it was funny how we looked like silver-mummies. The trip with this ship was a nice and ugly trip at the same time.
We arrived in Italia, in Sicilia. The church there welcomed us and gave us food and possibility to get a shower. They made many good things for us. They helped us and felt for us. Here everyone began to think about which country they wanted to go for. My goal was to go to Sweden, because I had friends there. Some wanted to go to for example Netherlands and some to Denmark. Everyone had a different aim, and they chose a destination, and wherever one would get “caught” by the border security and demanded to give fingerprints, then that would be the destination country. Short time after we got to Milano where the red cross were and they also helped us. They also made room for us in a church that had become like a refugee camp. They hosted us there for some time until we found our own way to continue our travel. People gathered in groups to arrange the kind of transportation and destination they wanted. I went together with four other guys with an Albanian car all the way from Milano to Denmark. We wanted to go to Sweden, but he said he could only take us to Denmark, and we knew that we could then take the train easily. So had our friends in Sweden told us. We went with this “taxi” through Austria and Germany to Denmark. It took about two days to get there, and we could not make a lot of stops. We were not allowed by the driver, because of the risk that he would get caught smuggling us. We even ran out of drinking water, and we could not go to the bathroom. He took the price of 750 euro from each person. 3750 euro all together. It’s like the price of a car.

We arrived in Denmark, ate a little, when to the bathroom and so on, and then we bought our tickets to Sweden and went. There were no border control. I’m very surprised that we didn’t meet any border control on our whole trip from Italy. It was an easy trip for us. Even our trip from Libya across the Mediterranean Sea also went easy, I think, compared to many other people. Some other people stayed on their ships for 19 hours or two or three days for example. All thanks to God we were only there for 9 hours. I mean it was terrifying, but compared to others it was easy.

We arrived in Sweden. First day in Malmö, and then they moved us to Stockholm. First we were in an area in Stockholm called Telefonplan for 4 days, and then they moved us to Solna. Then we came back again for a while, and then they moved us to Örebro, outside of Örebro in a village called Lindesberg. We stayed for 15 days and then they moved us again to Kopperberg. It was like that. This reminded me of when I was in the military service, where they would also move us around from camp to camp all the time, like one day in Damascus, then one day in Aleppo, first outside of Aleppo and the in the city and so on. Anyway, the situation was good.
So I’m still here in Sweden, I have been here now for 4 years, and my situation from the beginning in Sweden till now, All thanks to God, turned around 360 degrees in the better direction. Before it was very difficult, because when one is new to a country he doesn’t know the language jet, and he also needs to get to know people and establish a social network, who can help each other, and he need to get the right help from the immigration service. If there were no proper help, then maybe we would not succeed. Some refugees here succeed and got better here, while some got worse, destroyed. This depends on the programs that they have here in this country, if they are actually helpful or not. When there are real, powerful and authentic programs that help the refugees then it can really change something for a refugee in a short amount of time.
After one year in Sweden, I got my residence permit, and then I immediately applied for family reunification with my wife. My wife had stayed in Syria since the time I left in 2012, so at this time I hadn’t seen her for 2,5 years. After I applied it took another 2,5 years before we got the permit for her. I booked appointments for her in many Swedish embassies, for example in Turkey, but they closed the borders. In 2016 Sweden opened up an embassy in Sudan, and immediately I booked an appointment there. In 2017 I traveled to Sudan, and met with her there for the interview. I also traveled to Malaysia in 2016 just to see her. Malaysia and Sudan are the only two countries that allows Syrians to travel there without applying for visa.

My life in Sweden was difficult in the beginning, but after I learned the language more, I got some friends here. I started to mingle with swedes. I’m working now, and I actually found this job with the help of some of my Swedish friends. The social network is really important, and after one finds a job then he finds everything in front of him. Everything is good now, my wife is with me, and we now have a little daughter.
Syria is beautiful, there is no place like Syria. I still miss it very much, and my whole family is still there. I talk with them often on the phone, but I don’t get fulfilled by the phone calls, I long for the feeling of being with my family in reality – to sit with them, hug them, eat with them, go for trips together. The phone doesn’t do anything. You can for example use the phone to solve a problem, or to ask your family how they are, but you don’t fell the same thing as if you were there with them. So this is the situation now. Most refugees here are far away from their families, or their families died. I really hope that I get a chance to meet with my family again, and this thought is always on my mind. I hope that Syria returns to a good state soon, and becomes better than before.

But the reality is not so optimistic. No one, I mean no countries are really helping Syria. It has been 7 years and they are still just talking and talking. They don’t care about our situation, they just like to feel or look smart when they talk. They say, “We don’t want refugees.” Ok, but then they should not sell weapons and contribute to the war that we are fleeing from. You don’t want refugees, and we didn’t think about coming here before. We were actually happy in our country. If you didn’t want us to come here, then you shouldn’t have made this war in our country. Many countries only think about the economy, and therefore they sell weapons. They don’t think about the consequences. Some countries like for example Sweden needs more people, and if a country wants refugees, then they can make a war in order to get the people coming. In Sweden about 1/3 of the population are immigrants or refugees.

Dublin Core: Language: en Subject: a million stories, denmark, syria, military, refugee, ]]>
I have to think ahead, not only about the current situation http://refugeelives.eu/2018/12/27/i-have-to-think-ahead-not-only-about-the-current-situation/ Thu, 27 Dec 2018 10:37:13 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3722 Continue reading "I have to think ahead, not only about the current situation"

]]>
Mohammad Daoud, 36 years old, from Syria.

I live here in Malmö with my family. We came here to Sweden, to Malmö in 2014, but not directly from Syria. We came from United Arab Emirates. I lived there for 10 years before coming here to Sweden.This step was like a critical step in life, because we couldn’t get back to Syria, you know, because of the war, and the situation there is like… deeply bad, so the decision was to move to the best country that offers good conditions to people like us, in our condition. We thought of many countries, like Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, but at that time, Sweden was a better choice for us – a better option for the social environment that it has, and here I mean the racism, which here is, I think, the lowest in all of the European countries. That was one the one hand, and on the other hand, well the conditions of the individual, for example someone who lives in Sweden – What benefits and advantages and rights this individual has.

When we came here at first, we experiences heaps of differences between the cultures. I mean my culture or the eastern culture, and here the Western culture. We didn’t find actually that it was difficult for us to settle here and to adapt to the environment and to the culture, because we already lived in a country that included 80 different nationalities, in Dubai for example, so we are so open to different cultures.

But the ongoing problem that we are facing – and it is still on – it was finding a job. Like a proper job with the experience and the qualifications that we have, fx I have a huge experience in education, translation, and teaching. But here there are some like rutine and obsticales to find a job. For many reasons the first one is the language. The Swedish language it was like an obstacle to find a job first. And then we had to do many things in order to find a job. First of all, we had to finish the secondary level of language school, and then we had to complete our bachelor degree with subjects here in the country, which is not available in ours. And before that it was difficult, not impossible, but semi-impossible to find a job. So we are working on that. We are still studying the Swedish language, and we are in the final stage now. Afterwards we have to make this “kompletering” (in Swedish). Which means to complete our grades in our bachelor in order to be eligible to be teachers here in Sweden, and I think it is just a waste of time! Because we were here for four years, or actually more than four years now, and we could avoid wasting this much time by just one simple rule, or if they decided here to help people like us. For example, they could find us a job in the schools, and with this job we could acquire the language and we could participate in our experience, and be more useful to the society. This is actually what is in my priority and what is most important an order to be 100% settled in this country.

We are here now trying our best to finish this mission – getting the licences to be teachers here and work as teachers. Otherwise we could do new jobs, new carriers, which could be 100 % different from our education background, which is not easy for people in our age to start something new in my life. So this is my issue. Otherwise here is a very great country. I love it, and I have become Swedish citizen now, a few months ago. So yeah, this is my life now, and honestly I’m not thinking to get back to Syria, even if the war ended. Here it is much much better for the future of our children, not only for me. So I have to think ahead, not only about the current situation.

Dublin Core: Language: en Subject: a million stories, denmark, syria, sweden, refugee, education, teacher, ]]>
It was difficult to live apart from my husband http://refugeelives.eu/2018/12/27/it-was-difficult-to-live-apart-from-my-husband/ Thu, 27 Dec 2018 09:58:40 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3709 Continue reading "It was difficult to live apart from my husband"

]]>
Woman, 23 years old from Syria. Now living in Denmark.

My husband fled Syria in 2012, because of the dangerous situation and the fact that the police had captured him. From this time, I didn’t see him until the end of 2016, where we met in Malaysia. We had not seen each other in four – almost five years and this was one of the only places in the world that we could meet at that time.
It was difficult for my husband to make family reunification with me in Sweden, because one of the demands is that I make an interview in a Swedish embassy. Because of the war in Syria, of course the Swedish embassy closed down in Syria, so I had to do the interview in another country.
In 2016, I had an appointment with the Swedish embassy in Turkey, but unfortunately, they closed the borders from that time, so I couldn’t make it to my interview. In March 2017, I had an appointment in Jordan and then the same thing happened. I seemed impossible.
At last, I had to go to Sudan to make an interview at the Swedish embassy there, so I met with my husband there in the beginning of December 2017, and the interview went well. Three months after the interview I reunited with my husband in Sweden.
Now we have a beautiful daughter of two months old (exactly two months today when I’m telling my story).
Alhamdullilah – All thanks to God that now, our family is finally united.

Dublin Core: Language: en Subject: a million stories, syria, denmark, refugee, ]]>
I feel like it is a gift from God http://refugeelives.eu/2018/12/20/i-feel-like-it-is-a-gift-from-god/ Thu, 20 Dec 2018 11:58:29 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3696 Continue reading "I feel like it is a gift from God"

]]>
34-year old woman from, Lattakia, Syria,

I want to share my experience with raising my two kids in Sweden instead of in Syria.

I’m from Lattakia in Syria, like my husband. Every woman dreams of having children, and some people get kids right after marriage, while some people wait a little. After we married, we decided to wait a little to have kids, because we wanted to get to know each other better first.
And when we finally decided that we were ready to start a family, then it was not in God’s plan that I should become pregnant. I started to see some doctors and make tests, but the doctors said everything looked fine, but still I could not get pregnant.
When we arrived in Sweden, I was thinking about going to see a doctor again. They told me that I had to wait until I had stayed in Sweden at least one year until I could see a specialist for this matter and talk about treatments. It had to be a whole year, they said, because the body needs to adjust to the new weather and milieu. So I waited a year. And here is the story that I always love to tell: After exactly one year I went to the doctor, and she said she would send me to the hospital to have a fertility treatment.
We decided to make this treatment, and they wrote some documents for this. When I was about to go, the doctor just said, “wait, let me just take a small test, just because I need to write in the papers that a made a test before we send you to the treatment.” And when she made the test she couldn’t believe what she saw. The doctor started saying: “Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar, mashaallah, mashaallah”. I got afraid that there was something wrong – it was quite funny actually. Then she said: You are pregnant. It was so funny and great that we didn’t make the treatment yet, but they just figured out that I was pregnant when preparing the documents for the treatment. My husband called me after this.  My appointment in the hospital had taken more time than he expected, and I was crying. He first got afraid that something was wrong, but I told him while crying: I’m pregnant.
Now my boy is 2 years old. We called him Adam Fawaz, and he just got a younger brother, Daniel.
Before, I always expected that when I get my first child, then I will be close to my family and they will be there to help me out, and play with him and help raise him. It is our tradition that family is important and that kids will be close with their grandparents.
Now instead, I got my children after coming to Sweden, far away from my family, but it is also good, because the kids will have a healthy childhood/raise, and they will be safe because there is no war. There is no reason to worry for the children’s safety here. I’m thankful that I got my children after arriving here. Some people had to flee together with their children across the sea, and some died in the sea because they wanted to come here and raise their kids here, but I was already here when I got my children. I feel like it is a gift from God that it happened like that, and I’m very thankful. Sweden is a lovely country, and I love to see my kids grow up here.

Dublin Core: Language: en Subject: a million stories, denmark, syria, sweden, refugee, ]]>
“Together against racism” http://refugeelives.eu/2018/11/19/together-against-racism/ Mon, 19 Nov 2018 15:18:05 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3635 Continue reading "“Together against racism”"

]]>
My name is Raja and comes from Palestine but born in Syria. I have lived 1 year in Sweden. Together against racism.

Svenska: Jag heter Raja och kommer från Palestina men född i Syrien. Jag har bott 1 år i Sverige. Tillsammans mot rasism.


A Million Stories Sweden: Nizar Keblawi, Nina Olsson, Sara Sarabi, Malin Gillberg, Daniel Björklund, Mats Nordström.

A Million Stories Sweden volunteers: Fariborz Ghadir, Mohamad Mohsin, Yazan Saad, Tarek Aloudallah, Dalia Saleem, Yara Ali, Ahmad Younes, Chaimae Hamri.

In association with

Dublin Core: Language: sv, eng Subject: asylum, refugees, A Million Stories, Sweden, Palestine, Syria ]]>
“Human rights are the biggest lie” http://refugeelives.eu/2018/11/19/human-rights-are-the-biggest-lie/ Mon, 19 Nov 2018 15:14:32 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3632 Continue reading "“Human rights are the biggest lie”"

]]>
My name is Ayad, and is from Syria. I came to Sweden 2015. I am currently studying Swedish. The Employment Service does not help finding jobs. We want jobs that do not need Swedish. Sweden sells weapons to fighting parties in Syria. We die from these weapons. Human rights are the biggest lie.

Svenska: Jag heter Ayad, och kommer från Syrien. Jag kom till Sverige 2015. Jag studerar just nu svenska. Arbetsförmedlingen hjälper inte till att hitta jobb. Vi vill ha jobb som inte behöver svenska. Sverige säljer vapen till stridande partier i Syrien. Vi dör med vapnen. Mänskliga rättigheter är den största lögn.


A Million Stories Sweden: Nizar Keblawi, Nina Olsson, Sara Sarabi, Malin Gillberg, Daniel Björklund, Mats Nordström.

A Million Stories Sweden volunteers: Fariborz Ghadir, Mohamad Mohsin, Yazan Saad, Tarek Aloudallah, Dalia Saleem, Yara Ali, Ahmad Younes, Chaimae Hamri.

In association with

Dublin Core: Language: sv, eng Subject: asylum, refugees, A Million Stories, Sweden, Syria ]]>
“Apartment crisis” http://refugeelives.eu/2018/11/19/apartment-crisis/ Mon, 19 Nov 2018 14:59:31 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3629 Continue reading "“Apartment crisis”"

]]>
My name is Syeda and I come from Pakistan, I came to Sweden 8 months ago. Please solve the apartment crisis.

Svenska: Jag heter Syeda och kommer från Pakistan, jag kom till Sverige för 8 månader sedan. Snälla lös lägenhetskrisen.


A Million Stories Sweden: Nizar Keblawi, Nina Olsson, Sara Sarabi, Malin Gillberg, Daniel Björklund, Mats Nordström.

A Million Stories Sweden volunteers: Fariborz Ghadir, Mohamad Mohsin, Yazan Saad, Tarek Aloudallah, Dalia Saleem, Yara Ali, Ahmad Younes, Chaimae Hamri.

In association with

Dublin Core: Language: sv, eng Subject: asylum, refugees, A Million Stories, Sweden, Pakistan ]]>
“Drowning with their children” http://refugeelives.eu/2018/11/19/drowning-with-their-children/ Mon, 19 Nov 2018 14:48:02 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3626 Continue reading "“Drowning with their children”"

]]>
My name is Sulten and comes from Turkey. I came to Sweden 17 months ago. In Turkey, many women and men are imprisoned. They fly through a river called Meria. People fly together with their children. But some people are drowning with their children.

Svenska: Jag heter Sulten och kommer från Turkiet. Jag kom till Sverige för 17 månader sedan. I Turkiet fängslas många kvinnor och män. De flyr genom en flod som heter Meria. Människorna flyr tillsammans med deras barn. Men några människor drunknar med sina barn.


A Million Stories Sweden: Nizar Keblawi, Nina Olsson, Sara Sarabi, Malin Gillberg, Daniel Björklund, Mats Nordström.

A Million Stories Sweden volunteers: Fariborz Ghadir, Mohamad Mohsin, Yazan Saad, Tarek Aloudallah, Dalia Saleem, Yara Ali, Ahmad Younes, Chaimae Hamri.

In association with

Dublin Core: Language: sv, eng Subject: asylum, refugees, A Million Stories, Sweden, Turkey ]]>
“Every person needs peace” http://refugeelives.eu/2018/11/19/every-person-needs-peace/ Mon, 19 Nov 2018 14:27:14 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3623 Continue reading "“Every person needs peace”"

]]>
My name is Mashal and comes from Afghanistan. I came to Sweden 9 months ago. Every person needs peace. I really want to see peace in my home country.

Svenska: Jag heter Mashal och kommer från Afghanistan. Jag kom till Sverige för 9 månader sedan. Varje människa behöver fred. Jag vill verkligen se fred i mitt hemland.


A Million Stories Sweden: Nizar Keblawi, Nina Olsson, Sara Sarabi, Malin Gillberg, Daniel Björklund, Mats Nordström.

A Million Stories Sweden volunteers: Fariborz Ghadir, Mohamad Mohsin, Yazan Saad, Tarek Aloudallah, Dalia Saleem, Yara Ali, Ahmad Younes, Chaimae Hamri.

In association with

Dublin Core: Language: sv, eng Subject: asylum, refugees, A Million Stories, Sweden, Afganistan ]]>
“Nightmare” http://refugeelives.eu/2018/11/19/nightmare/ Mon, 19 Nov 2018 14:21:26 +0000 http://refugeelives.eu/?p=3620 Continue reading "“Nightmare”"

]]>
My name is Zahra and comes from Lebanon. I came to Sweden 4 months ago.

Svenska: Jag heter Zahra och kommer från Libanon. Jag kom till Sverige för 4 månader sedan.


A Million Stories Sweden: Nizar Keblawi, Nina Olsson, Sara Sarabi, Malin Gillberg, Daniel Björklund, Mats Nordström.

A Million Stories Sweden volunteers: Fariborz Ghadir, Mohamad Mohsin, Yazan Saad, Tarek Aloudallah, Dalia Saleem, Yara Ali, Ahmad Younes, Chaimae Hamri.

In association with

Dublin Core: Language: sv, eng Subject: asylum, refugees, A Million Stories, Sweden, Lebanon ]]>