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Young Muslim Saviour Helps Two Elderly Iraqi Christians Start A New

YOUNG MUSLIM SAVIOUR HELPS TWO ELDERLY IRAQI CHRISTIANS START A NEW LIFE
By Abeer Etefa in Cairo, Egypt

PeaceJournalism.com, Nepal
Source: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
May 10 2007

CAIRO, Egypt, May 10 (UNHCR) – Two Iraqi Christians were beginning
a new life in the Netherlands on Thursday, eternally grateful to
the young Egyptian woman who took them in more than five months
ago after finding the two old ladies alone and bewildered at Cairo
International Airport.

The women, Rose*, 78, and her 76-year-old sister Georgette*, flew
out of Cairo International Airport on Wednesday for a reunion in
Amsterdam with the older woman’s daughter, perhaps their only living
relative. The siblings fear that Rose’s son, who put them on a plane
for Egypt at the end of December, has been killed in the Iraqi cauldron
along with his family.

Seeing them off was Amal*, the devout 23-year-old Muslim who had
been dropping off relatives at the airport on New Year’s Eve when
she spotted the distressed women and offered them shelter, help
and friendship.

While the Iraqi women were looking forward to a reunion with their
relative, they were also distraught at leaving behind the young
Muslim woman and her Saudi husband, Mohamed,* who had done so much
for them, including putting the women in touch with UNHCR to help
find a lasting solution.

"What can I say? Where in the world can you find someone who will host
you for five months, feed you, take care of you and worry about you?,"
Rose asked, tears rolling down her cheeks. "I am indebted to this
man, whom I consider a son now, and his wife and their 20-month-old
daughter."

She was also crying for her son and his family. "All we want from life
now is to see my daughter and to hear news about my son. We want to
rest in peace," Rose stressed.

Rose and Georgette’s journey has its roots in the fighting and
sectarianism that has gained pace in Iraq since 2004 and uprooted
millions of Iraqis. Some 1.9 million Iraqis are displaced inside
the country and up to 2 million others have fled abroad, mainly to
neighbouring Syria and Jordan.

The older sister, whose ancestors came from Armenia, said her family
were targeted by militias in Baghdad because they were Christians
and from a minority group. "My [teenage] grandson sustained serious
injuries on his way from school one afternoon [last December] after
escaping from the militias who were trying to kidnap him. That night
we made a decision to leave," Rose said.

"We sold all of our furniture and belongings and took the US$250 that
we were able to collect and headed to the airport the next morning,"
she noted. Her son Ragheb,* his wife and their children were unable
to board the plane because they did not possess the correct documents,
but Rose’s boy gave his elderly relatives the money and said he would
try to get a visa and join them later.

"He asked me to use the money for one or two week’s rent and said that
we should call him as soon as we had an address," Rose said, adding
that when they arrived in Cairo they had no money left because they had
to spend it on excess baggage charges. They felt depressed and lost.

This was when fate entered in the form of Amal, who always wears
the niqab veil that covers the face leaving only small slits for
the eyes. "While I was about to leave the airport, I saw two elderly
ladies crying and in a state of panic," she recalled. The young woman
went up to the women and when she found out about their predicament,
Amal invited Rose and Georgette to her house.

The Egyptian thought Rose’s son would soon turn up in Cairo, but he
never did and she could not reach him on his mobile phone number.

"One day passed and another day and then a week and I started to feel
worried about the two elderly sisters and about the son, whose fate
up till this moment is unknown," said Amal.

Amal was able to contact Rose’s daughter, who had been living in
Amsterdam for many years. She also contacted UNHCR after a cousin told
her about its work in resettling refugees. "The moment I reached UNHCR,
I felt that a heavy weight had been taken off my chest.

Someone else besides me was thinking of a long-term solution for
these two elderly ladies."

UNHCR staff registered the sisters and referred their case to the
Dutch embassy for resettlement in the Netherlands. "The two ladies
did not have any long-term support in Egypt and were a classic case
of vulnerability," said Muriel Jurmie, a UNHCR resettlement officer,
who thanked Amal and her husband Mohamed.

Rose and Georgette now have the opportunity to live out their twilight
years in peace and comfort, but there will always be uncertainty and
sadness so long as the relatives left behind in Baghdad remain missing.

For her part, Amal can take heart from her good deed, but it might
not be quite enough. "I will truly miss them, I got so used to having
them at home," she said. "I hope that the next phase of their life
will bring them peace and serenity. No one deserves to go through
the trauma that they went through at this age."

* Names changed for protection reasons

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