Firas* remembers the day he received a desperate plea for help from a man he鈥檇 never met. 鈥淗e was Syrian and was stuck in Moria refugee camp on the Greek island Lesbos,鈥 Firas recalls. 鈥淗e said he couldn鈥檛 trust anyone, that everyone was lying and he was going to kill himself.鈥

A Syrian refugee himself, Firas understood the stranger鈥檚 dilemma. He offered words of reassurance. 鈥淚 told him, 鈥業 was in your situation, but look how different my life is now, and yours will be, too.鈥

Firas, 22, worked with , a digital service created by the 探花精选 in partnership with Google, Microsoft and Trip Advisor. The online and mobile platform provides crucial information to refugees seeking asylum from war and persecution. In this case, Firas, then living in Athens, was able to assist someone on the other side of the Aegean Sea by listening to his needs and providing counsel. 

鈥淭he man told me I鈥檇 given him hope and he would persevere,鈥 Firas says. 鈥滻 knew how our refugee clients felt, and could help them by providing answers.鈥

Refugee.Info, launched in Greece in 2015 and expanded to Bulgaria, Serbia and most recently Italy, is primarily accessed through its or and is designed to be easy to use on mobile phones. Refugees can access local support services鈥攚here to find shelter and access to legal aid, transportation and medical facilities鈥攊n Arabic, Farsi, French and English. Fellow refugees serve as site moderators to answer questions and tailor the service to meet the specific needs of their clients.

A group of refugees in Sid, Serbia, gather to access Refugee.Info on a mobile phone
Using Refugee.Info on a mobile phone or computer, refugees in Europe can find shelter and access to legal aid, transportation and medical facilities. The service was created by the 探花精选 in partnership with Google, Microsoft and Trip Advisor.
Photo: Monique Jaques/探花精选

 

While Firas is proud of the work he has done, it isn鈥檛 exactly what he had planned for his life. In fact, his ambitions were once very different. 鈥淚 was studying biomedical engineering in Syria,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a new field that brings medicine and engineering together. It鈥檚 all about using technology to help human beings鈥攆or example, developing artificial heart tissue or robotic prosthetic limbs.鈥

He completed two years at Damascus University before the war changed everything. His father, a teacher, had to pass through military checkpoints to get to work each day. One day he didn鈥檛 come home. It was also the day Firas鈥檚 mother, far into her pregnancy, went into early labor. 

鈥淲e rushed to the hospital and I remember running with the nurses, pushing my mother on a hospital bed to the operating room,鈥 he says. She had an emergency Caesarean, and I was the first person to hold my baby sister. My father was able to come home, and we called my new sister Sara.鈥

But by the time Sara had reached age two, the family knew they had to leave Syria. Firas stayed behind, but soon realized the danger was too great. 鈥淚, too, was forced to flee. I traveled alone to Turkey and then continued on to Greece.鈥 There he reunited with his extended family鈥攗ncles, aunts and cousins鈥攊n a makeshift camp in Idomeni, a small village on Greece鈥檚 northern border.

I knew how our refugee clients felt, and could help them by providing answers.

鈥淲e were 48 people in 13 tents, enduring the cold, the wind, the rain,鈥 says Firas. At the time, overwhelmed European nations were closing their borders to new arrivals, and Firas found himself moving from one camp to another, one of thousands of refugees whose lives were in limbo.

All the while, Firas strove to keep active, continued his education by taking computer courses online, and helped others. 鈥淚 was living in a camp near Thessaloniki and I saw lots of food being wasted,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚 decided to collect it for people in need, many of whom were Greek.鈥 Then Firas discovered Refugee.Info. 

鈥淭here were so many rumors flying around: 鈥楾he border will open tomorrow鈥here鈥檚 a new route to go north.鈥 Through Refugee.Info, I found accurate information about what was actually happening. Eventually I became an official moderator.鈥

Close-up of a phone a woman is using to access Refugee.Info
More than 600,000 people in Europe have accessed Refugee.Info resources, which are available in Arabic, Farsi, French and English. The 探花精选 and its partners are launching similar sites in Jordan and El Salvador.
Photo: Daphne Tolis/探花精选

Firas and his family now live in Germany. His girlfriend, Anna, whom he met while she was volunteering in Greece, is from Germany and has helped the family adjust to their new home. 鈥淎nna鈥檚 grandparents invited me to spend Christmas with them. They are kind people and welcomed me into the family. They are open to the fact that their granddaughter鈥檚 boyfriend is a refugee from Syria!鈥

Firas, who was separated from his baby sister for most of their years living in the camps in Greece, is getting reacquainted with Sara. 鈥淎fter two years apart she was too shy to come to me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was sad because in Syria I could always comfort her, and in Germany she saw me as a stranger.鈥 Now when Sara learns something new, like a German song at kindergarten, she comes to me to sing it!鈥

Life in Germany is by no means secure for Firas. 鈥淚鈥檝e been here for four months now, and I don鈥檛 want to give my family the false hope that we鈥檒l be together from now on. I鈥檝e been officially relocated to France, where I know no one. I have appealed to the court and am hoping to stay in Germany. We are waiting to find out.鈥

Says Firas, 鈥淏efore the war, I had a dream to help people through my work as a biomedical engineer. Now I know that even though my life has changed, I can live out my dream to help people in other ways. I will not waste time, and I will never give up.鈥

*Names in this story have been changed to protect privacy

Based on the success of Refugee.Info, similar sites are being launched in Jordan and El Salvador, under a new global platform, Signpost. Learn more.