Friday, July 29, 2016

Rio 2016: Meet A Syrian Refugee Who Swam Her Life All The Way To The Olympics (So Touching) |PoliFocus

Yusra Mardini
There are those whose footsteps we would not want to follow, whose shoes we would not want to be in - yet we strive to have their character, their strength, their drive and their courage.

It is from them we learn that the worst of humanity can bring out the best in humanity. Yusra Mardini used to be a typical teenager.


She wouldd chew the fat with friends, smartphone in hand, laughing.The middle of three daughters, she lived at homewith her parents, attended a gymnastics club and loved swimming - she could potentially become a great swimmer - yet it was an ordinary life, not the sort of existence journalists would travel far to write about.

Then came Syria's civil war, the callousness of conflict, with its bombs, its suffering, its death. Cheerful chatter was no longer normal and as the years passed - one becoming two, three turning into four - home morphed into hell as her country was torn apart.

She was alive but not living. Her house came under fire, forcing the family to move. The roof of the swimming pool where she trained in the Syrian capital of Damascus was ripped open by bombs.

She could see the water, but no longer be in it. It was torture. Mardini knew of footballers who had died in an attack.

"I could not take it any more," says the 18-year-old. This daughter of a swimming coach had two choices: exist in her homeland without hope, or escape for the freedom to dream.

"Maybe I'm going to die on the way," she explains. "But I'm almost dead in my country. I can't do anything."

It is 12 August, 2015, four and a half years since the civil war began. It is the day Mardini and her eldest sister, Sarah, will leave Syria with their father's two cousins and other refugees.

They say farewell to their tearful parents and younger sister, who would follow their journey on GPS, and flee to Beirut, their first destination in what will become a 25-day slog.

This group of refugees know what they must do: follow the path taken by over four million of their compatriots.

No-one knows how many people have died in the war. The United Nations stopped collecting statistics in 2014 when the death toll was 250,000.

More recent reports say the number is twice that - that 11.5% of the country's population has been killed or injured, that life expectancy dropped from 70 in 2010 to 55.4 in 2015.

Credit: bbc

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please share your thoughts by clicking on POST A COMMENT link or posting in FACEBOOK COMMENT BOX above:


DISCLAIMER:

Opinions expressed in comments are strictly those of the comment writers alone and does not reflect or represent the views of PoliFocus.

Calling the CONTACTS on the comments is at your own risk, PoliFocus is not liable for any SCAM that may arise in the course of that.