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I AM A REFUGEE: Global refugees share their stories

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    I remember it was at night.
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    I was in the city named Mosul about 7pm.
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    One day my son go to the school.
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    I just heard some gunshots and everything
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    and people came and
    knocked the door,
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    broke the door and took everybody outside.
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    And after a while he come back
    because he say,
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    "There is a man. He's dead, on the glass."
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    People in the street, they stopped me.
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    They were killing people around me.
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    They tried to kidnap me from the car.
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    They are shooting the people
    in front of my house.
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    And we start to run,
    and once they turn back
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    they see us running away,
    they start to shout at us.
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    They gonna ask my family for money
    and they gonna kill me after that.
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    I was young but I could see
    what was going on
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    and it was hard to see.
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    It was so, so horrible.
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    It was so danger to stay more.
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    So, I decided to move.
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    I AM A REFUGEE
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    Life in Bosnia before was awesome.
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    We were living, like, peacefully.
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    I grew up a good life because
    my mom's family were good financially.
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    I had small business,
    my restaurant over there.
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    We have some problems,
    we have some good.
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    It's normal.
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    But eventually,
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    without any warning or anything,
    it just started one day.
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    We were outside when bombing started.
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    It was kind of unexpected.
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    I left when I was 11 years old.
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    Eight years old.
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    I think I was 16.
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    Our parents said that,
    "OK, we need to do a bus ride."
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    We were told we're going to the city
    for the amusement park.
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    We didn't know that we are leaving
    for forever.
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    Almost all the Iraqi people,
    they can't live in camp.
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    We were never in a refugee camp.
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    We were living in refugee camp.
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    About two years in the refugee camp.
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    I grew up in the refugee camp.
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    You don't know where you're gonna end up.
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    I think at one point we were gonna end up
    in Finland,
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    and then, another point, we were gonna
    end up in Sweden.
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    It was a whole process, actually
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    and screening before we get approval.
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    Finally, they told us,
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    "You're gonna end up in Buffalo,
    New York."
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    We thought it was New York City
    but it wasn't.
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    Coming to the United States
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    is also one of the challenging things.
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    That's a very strange transition,
    180 degrees.
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    Everything was hard.
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    For three days we didn't even
    leave our home.
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    English was
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    completely out of my mind.
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    My English was, like, zero.
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    I couldn't talk to anybody.
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    In school I was just by myself,
    sitting there.
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    I remember being asked,
    "What's your name?"
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    And my answer was, "Yes."
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    Everything was different.
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    First of all, the weather.
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    It was my first time see big buildings.
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    This the first time in my life
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    I sleep on mattress.
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    We went into the bus and we were circling
    for like three hours
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    because I didn't know there is a string
    you should pull down
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    if you want to get out.
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    And then finally my dad decided,
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    "You know what? I'm gonna leave."
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    "I see a corner store that people
    are coming in and out,"
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    "I'm gonna walk there."
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    My mom and I remember
    looking out of the window
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    to see if he makes it back safely.
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    And then he came back all happy
    because the owner of the
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    corner store was Yemenese,
    so he speaks Arabic.
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    That made my dad's day.
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    We thought that there is
    only one kind of people,
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    but when we arrived here and there is like
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    white people
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    Asian people
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    African people
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    Lot of people, so,
    "Oh, OK. Maybe we are good too."
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    I start looking for job
    just after couple months.
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    My first job is mechanic.
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    I work in medical billing.
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    It's my first year of college.
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    Right now I work as interpreter,
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    and I love that job.
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    When you start job,
    you feel proud for yourself.
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    My salary start with $8.50.
    I was so happy.
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    I help other people who were in my shoes.
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    Every day I call my dad,
    "Are you proud now?"
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    I'm just looking to be here and
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    go bac to school as every kid's supposed
    to do.
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    I feel that this community make me feel
    very welcome.
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    I decided, only one way to pay back
    those people.
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    I'm not rich, so I'm not gonna pay back
    financially.
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    I decided to join the armed forces.
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    Until today, I'm serving here
    about 13 years.
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    Interviewer: What do you feel like
    you've left behind,
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    or what do you miss the most
    about life there?
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    I miss my whole life.
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    It's not easy to leave the people
    that you love.
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    I miss...
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    you had a sense of connection,
    you had a sense of belonging.
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    I'm still searching for that.
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    I like how everything goes here,
    but it doesn't change me much
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    'cause I still have this sense of
    where I came from.
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    To be honest with you,
    I don't miss my country.
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    Because here I found what I missed.
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    I want to be more, I want to be better,
    you know?
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    What is my dream?
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    Oh, there are a lot of dreams.
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    My dream was to go to school
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    which I went for, like, eight years.
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    That feeling when I graduated,
    it's like something no one can pay you for.
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    Like, when they call your name.
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    One dream come true,
    that I buy a home for the first time.
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    What's your dream for the future?
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    I wish that I could be a singer.
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    It's done. It happened.
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    When I saw my kids, they grow up
    in safety place
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    and they study what they want
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    and they don't need to do something
    they don't like it
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    that's the dream. What I need more?
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    My name is Immaculee.
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    I'm Nadeen Yousef.
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    Felix Madgi.
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    Hi, my name is Masarra Faek.
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    I'm from Iraq.
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    Bhutan.
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    Burundi.
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    Burma.
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    I am a refugee, and I am global citizen.
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    I'm a global citizen.
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    I am a global citizen.
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    I AM A MOTHER
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    I AM A DAUGHTER
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    I AM A HUSBAND
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    I AM A BROTHER
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    I AM A FRIEND
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    I AM A NEIGHBOR
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    I AM A STUDENT
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    I AM AN ENTREPRENEUR
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    I AM A GLOBAL CITIZEN
Title:
I AM A REFUGEE: Global refugees share their stories
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Refugee Crisis and Solutions
Duration:
06:30

English subtitles

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