Last modified on Fri 12 Aug 2022 21.01 BSTBy the time we arrived at the big blue gate of Kabul airport, there must have been tens of thousands of people there. They were rushing from this gate to that for safety, shouting and yelling for help.were yelling at people and pointing their guns at them. You could hear gunshots everywhere. I saw a man bleeding from the side of his face yelling for help but nobody cared.
One of them saw how tired and energy-less we were. To help us, he picked my little daughter up just like a doll in his arm. Light and easy. They did the same to any other families when they saw they need help, especially when their kids couldn’t walk. Then they took us to a place which belonged to Australian forces and gave us something to eat, with bottles of water. I don’t really know how much you can feel the depth of a catastrophe. Sometimes I thought we are part of a scene of a movie.
But the feeling of flying away like a bird to an unknown part of the world bothered me. The scenes down there in darkness were fearful, upsetting and rattling. It was gunshots, bullets and people dying down there. We were tested for coronavirus and, after the results were negative, we were taken to Camp Cardinia in the same dream bus. Camp Cardinia was a nice place. There, in the 45C heat we had a cool room with an air-conditioner running 24/7. We had a small clinic, doctors and medicine and a small library where we could borrow books. The children picked pencils, notebooks, books and toys. They gave Diana diapers, too. Due to the large population and scarcity of space, men were separated from women.
It was a historical moment for me and my family. The plane had soft wide seats. They even gave Daniel and Diana separate seats. Daniel could watch cartoons on the small TV in front of him. From the map it had, I could see how far I was going from Afghanistan, and I felt sorry for everything. Noor measures up a window in a kebab shop for a promotional poster promoting Noor and Masuma’s bolani pastry pockets. After quitting his job at a manufacturing plant, Noor momentarily ventured into the food business, producing and selling bolani to small kebab shops owned by Afghan refugees in Melbourne’s south-eastNoor M RamazanHours passed.
We had to spend two weeks in a room for quarantine. Adult Multicultural Education Services Australia members looked after us royally in a nice hotel in the city. We had everything. In the cold weather of Melbourne, I enjoyed the hot shower I took every morning. Our varied three meals regularly reached behind the door on time. We were corona tested every two or three days and fortunately all were negative. The doctors always took care of us.
What a beautiful and poignant article ♥️
. The author describes migrants queuing for rental properties in disadvantaged suburbs, unable to meet requirements, “washing heater tanks with acid” all day with no friendly words from Melbourne co-workers, only being told that he is doing it wrong and needs to work faster. .
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