Poging GOUD - Vrij
THE RELUCTANT REFUGEE
Maclean's
|July 2024
I was one of the first Syrian refugees to land in Canada in 2014. The settlement process was confusing, prolonged and alienating. How Canada finally became home.
In September of 2014, I was one of the first Syrian refugees to make it to Canada. Upon my arrival, I became a newcomer. Then, a couple of years later, I became Canadian. It is awkward to call myself a refugee. I used to be one, but I am not anymore. How can I introduce myself, then, in a simple, succinct way? Should I call myself a Syrian Canadian with refugee experience? That's a mouthful. When someone lives a life complicated by civil wars, revolutions, homophobia and borders, is there really a way to simply identify? How do I encompass the years of refuge, diaspora and community-building into one noun? Does a refugee ever stop being a refugee?
I was displaced long before I left Syria. I was a queer man born in Damascus to a conservative Muslim family. I knew my father's religion rejected me, condemning me to a death sentence. Syria's civil laws were more lenient: suspected homosexuals were punished with a mere three years' imprisonment and public shaming in local newspapers. When I came out in my late teens, my parents kicked me out to live in the streets. Long before the city became a war zone, I hid in the nooks and corners of the underground queer community and found solace and companionship there.
During the day, I worked as a journalist, writing under pseudonyms for Western news outlets. I reported on anti-regime protests, sneaking information from under the iron-fenced borders to journalists in Beirut and Cairo. At night, my home was a meeting hub for members of the queer and trans community in Syria. Many of us had nowhere to go other than these little gathering places, where we could be ourselves truthfully and authentically. We needed that secrecy: local journalists and community builders were routinely rounded up by the Syrian regime.
Dit verhaal komt uit de July 2024-editie van Maclean's.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Maclean's
Maclean's
Keep Classrooms Al-Free
A humanities education is vital in our polarized world. But students need to read the books.
5 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
Teach Kids Digital Nutrition
Instead of fixating solely on screentime, parents should help children discern between healthy and junky content
5 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
STILL LIVES
A new retrospective traces how Jeff Wall built a career out of meticulously staged moments
2 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
THE RICH LIST
THE 40 WEALTHIEST CANADIANS– AND HOW THEY MADE THEIR MONEY
4 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
THE GREAT UNBUILD
A Vancouver couple salvaged materials from an '80s home to build a carbon-neutral barn by the sea
3 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
Eight Years of School. Zero Job Offers,
I've completed two master's degrees and submitted more than 200 applications. I still can't find work.
6 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
THE BATTLE FOR THE SOUL OF THE UNIVERSITY
A group of University of British Columbia professors say their administration is taking too many political stances and should commit to institutional neutrality. They're going to court to prove it.
22 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
My Secret Addiction
Over eight years, I drained my savings and maxed out my credit cards calling online psychics. How a billion-dollar industry fed my need for human connection.
19 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
THE INTERVIEW
Jeremy Hansen's job is moon. One day, it might not just be trained astronauts like him up there.
9 mins
December 2025
Maclean's
When Helicopter Parents Go to University
Making wake-up calls. Tracking locations. Managing assignment deadlines. How hyper-involved moms and dads can't seem to back off.
6 mins
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

