Aygun and her two sons (© Refugee Action 2002. Photograph by Andrew Lamb)
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REFUGEE VOICES - SAY IT WITH FEELING

At the very heart of our RAP sessions are the refugees and asylum seekers who talk about their experiences. Their words can change minds. Often it’s only when people hear these first-hand accounts of the terrible circumstances that force folks to flee, that they understand these complex situations more clearly.

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Aygun

From Turkey

On Aygun’s bedroom wall there is a drawing of a Muslim prophet. Underneath, scrawled in Turkish, are the words: “Don’t carry hatred in your heart.”

As a member of Turkey’s Kurdish minority, the 34-year-old mother of two knows the consequences of hatred all too well. “My husband’s cousin was killed by the authorities because they thought he was one of the Kurdish guerrillas,” says Aygun.

“Because of this they suspected my husband as well. He was beaten and tortured. They drove us out of our village. They interrogated us, sometimes all through the night, called us ‘dirty Kurds’ and said: ‘We’ll burn you all.’

“My husband escaped to the UK. Then one day they beat me in front of my children. That was when I knew I had to get out.  When we made it to the UK I felt like a new-born person because we were safe. I was so happy.”

Yet today, as she waits for a decision from the Home Office, Aygun is once again living in fear. “Children on the estate are throwing stones at us, smashing our windows and calling us names. They are making racist attacks on us. One of our neighbours threw a lit cigarette at my child. I am afraid to go out and I keep my children locked inside the house.

“I want to be allowed to work and contribute to the community. People shouldn’t be racist. Then I could let my children go outside and play with theirs.”

Please don’t reproduce this story in any other format without prior permission. Some names have been changed.