They waded into the water at midnight, Amajgar tells me,
from the sandy beach in Turkey. He and his tiny wife held their three children –
aged between three and seven – on their
shoulders, walking step by step into the cold water in the pitch dark. Around
them other shadows moved in the water, following the same path to the black horizon. Forty feet out
from the sloping beach they stood in the swirling chest-high tide until the
smuggler boat arrived. They had made the attempt six times before, but a few
times the Turkish police had interceded, and others the smuggler boat,
alerted to trouble, had not arrived, leaving them waiting freezing and
uncertain for hours. This time they had been lucky.
“How did you keep them quiet?” I asked, amazed.
“I promised them a new bicycle each if they were quiet,”
Amajgar said. “I said if we managed to reach the UK that the first thing I
would do is buy them a new bicycle. They never made a sound.”
We’re sitting in a small bedsit in Wolverhampton, and
Amajgar’s wife fusses around us – bringing us trays of popcorn, home-baked
bread chapattis and honey. Amajgar shows me pictures on his mobile phone while
his children sit on my shoulders and bounce excitedly. My neck is beginning to
ache.
“It took us five months,” says Amajgar reflectively. “Four
weeks to manage to leave Turkey, two
weeks to cross to France, and another three
months to cross to the UK.”
As a sixteen year old boy, Amajgar had made the journey
before. During the first Iraq war, he, his brothers and some friends, escaped
to the UK and, as unaccompanied minors, were put into care and brought up in the
north of England. Unlike many of the Afghan boys given conditional asylum, he
was not sent back to Iraq when he was 18. Instead, he returned home of his own
volition in his twenties, married his wife and his three children soon followed.
Amajgar built a good living and used his fluent English
acquired in growing up in the UK to good effect. But when Daesh with their
black banners rolled into their city in central Iraq in summer 2015, it wasn't safe to walk the streets. Worse, word started
to spread about his British connections and rumours started that he was a spy. Concerned, his father gave him a phone and told him to escape that very evening. Amajgar
took his wife and children and got into a taxi bound for Turkey. Once through
the border a couple of days later, he rang his father, who told him that a
Daesh family were already installed and living in their old home.
So it happened that, fifteen years later, Amjgar was re-tracing the same route to the UK, but this time bringing his children with him.
So it happened that, fifteen years later, Amjgar was re-tracing the same route to the UK, but this time bringing his children with him.
They travelled through Macedonia and by train through
Hungary without incident – at that time, the border controls worked in their
favour as EU states gave up trying to halt the flow of arrivals. Once in Calais
though, they took another two months staying in a freezing, dripping tent, during the worst time of the camp conditions, constantly subjected to tear gas and the threat of violence from police, before Amajgar successfully contacted a
smuggler who arranged passage across the Channel in the back of a refrigerated
lorry.
“It was a fridge
lorry,” remembers Amajgar. “But it was empty as the food was finished, so they
had switched off the ice. But what I didn’t realise was that the lorry was airtight.”
The bread tastes dry in my mouth, and I glance over at his
children, one lying sprawled on the sofa, the other two watching Peppa Pig on
his mobile phone.
Their lorry successfully crossed the Channel, but as it
reached the other side, the air had become hot and they were struggling to
breathe. His youngest daughter, not yet three, was experiencing an asthma
attack. Amajgar banged on the side of the lorry to alert the driver. Lorry
drivers, who will get fined if they are discovered illegally transporting
people into the country, usually stop and let the occupants escape into the countryside.
But this one did not stop, as the frightened driver picked up speed. With
minutes left from disaster, Amajgar used a small hammer in his bag to beat at
the door until it buckled, allowing enough air to escape into the cabin to
relieve them. Through the aperture he could see the motorway signs. He used his
mobile phone to call the police, who finally flagged the driver down.
“But we were lucky,” says Amajgar, looking around the sparsely-furnished
flat. “We are here now, in this lovely home. It is warm, very very warm.” He
smiles. “No bombs here.”
His oldest child has just got a place in school, and is
still wearing the blue school uniform from earlier in the day. She yawns and reads a magazine. She’s just turned eight now, and her English is almost fluent. Back in
Iraq, Daesh would not have let her go to school. The youngest child, now three,
bounces excitedly on my knee, holding out her hands. She breathlessly chants a
rhyme.
“Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker’s man! Back me a cake as fast
as you can!”
“How do you like the UK?” I ask them.. They smile
brilliantly back at me. "I like UK!" they trill happily. "UK! UK!!"
How can they be so calm? The smuggler boat, the terrifying air-tight lorry, all these are as much part of their upbringing as children's cartoons. One of them stands on my shoulders, and dive-bombs onto the old sofa with an excited shriek.
"But I kept my promise, you know," Amajgar says.
"Pardon?" I ask.
Amajgar grins, and points to a corner of the room. Behind the
sofa, next to the sleeping bags where the adults sleep at night, are three
brand new bicycles.
TRUE STORY.
(SOME OF THE IDENTIFYING DETAILS HAVE BEEN CHANGED AS THE
FAMILY IS STILL UNDERGOING THE ASYLUM PROCESS)
4 comments:
A heart warming story but I wonder how the future will be for them in the UK.
An inspiring story, Tess - hope they will be allowed to stay here.
What strength he and his family must have to survive a journey like this, Tess.
The people with the daring, resourcefulness and strength of resolve to escape a murderous regime and make it against all the odds across the seas to the UK are exactly the sort of people we want working here. Thanks for posting - amazing story.
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