Christian teen saved 18 refugees in Aegean Sea, became Olympic swimmer
By Mark Ellis, Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service
“In
Syria I worked in a swimming pool to watch people not drowning, so if I
let anyone drown or die I would not forgive myself,” Yusra Mardini, 18,
told People Magazine about her harrowing journey.
Mardini
grew up in Damascus, the daughter of a swim coach, who began training
her at three-years-old. When she got a little older, she began to swim
for the Syrian national team and received support from the Syrian
Olympic Committee. Her talent in the pool showed amazing promise.
But when the Syrian civil war broke out in 2011, her competitive swimming lane evaporated. She was only 13.
School was often canceled for days because of threats to students’ lives.
She
and her friends attempted to live normal lives as teenagers. “In the
beginning, everyone talked about it, but then after a few years, we were
like: ‘O.K., if I’m going to die, I’m going to die! But let me live my
life. I want to see my friends!’”
In
2012, the Mardinis’ home was destroyed in the Daraya massacre, which
resulted in hundreds killed. Two friends on her swim team were slain and
later a bomb shredded the roof of her training center, according to The Times.
Over
the next few years, conditions deteriorated. Distraught, she went to
her mother one day and pleaded with her to allow her to join the exodus
escaping the war: “Enough is enough,” she declared.
On
Aug. 12, 2015, Mardini and her sister Sarah left with two of her
father’s cousins and another friend. They flew from Damascus to Beirut,
then on to Istanbul, where they connected with smugglers and a group of
30 other refugees.
The
group was bused to Izmir, Turkey, and then taken to the coast to wait
for a boat that would take them to the Greek island of Lesbos.
After
several days, Mardini, her sister, and 18 others were crammed into a
rubber dinghy meant to hold six. Thirty minutes into their journey, the
engine died and they began taking on water in rough seas.
Fearful the boat might capsize, some passengers began to panic and threw their possessions overboard to lighten the load.
Photo
captions: 1) Yusra Madrini. 2) A group of Syrians arrive on Lesbos
after sailing on an inflatable raft from Turkey. (Andrew
McConnel/Panos). 3) Yusra training. 4) Mark Ellis.
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