For Family Of Drowned Syrian Boy, ‘There Was No Other Hope,’ Uncle Says

Abdullah Kurdi, holds the body of his 3-year-old son, Aylan Kurdi, during the burial of the boy, his brother Friday and his mother at a funeral in Kobane, Syria.i

Abdullah Kurdi, holds the body of his 3-year-old son, Aylan Kurdi, during the burial of the boy, his brother Friday and his mother at a funeral in Kobane, Syria.

Dicle News Agency/EPA/Landov


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Dicle News Agency/EPA/Landov

Abdullah Kurdi, holds the body of his 3-year-old son, Aylan Kurdi, during the burial of the boy, his brother Friday and his mother at a funeral in Kobane, Syria.

Abdullah Kurdi, holds the body of his 3-year-old son, Aylan Kurdi, during the burial of the boy, his brother Friday and his mother at a funeral in Kobane, Syria.

Dicle News Agency/EPA/Landov

A Turkish paramilitary police officer carries the body of 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi, found washed ashore near the Turkish resort of Bodrum early Wednesday. The boats carrying the boy's family to the Greek island of Kos capsized. His 5-year-old brother and mother also lost their lives.

Relatives of 3-year-old Syrian Kurdish boy Aylan Kurdi carry his body during a funeral procession for Aylan, his mother, Rehan, and his older brother, Galip, in Kobani, Syria, on Friday.

Family members, reunited after fleeing Kosovo, pass 2-year-old Agim Shala through the barbed wire fence into the hands of his grandparents at a camp in Albania. The photo was taken on March 3, 1999.

Seeing no other options to help get her brother Abdullah’s family out of Syria and to safety, Teema Kurdi sent him money to get them onto a smuggler’s boat that would take them to Greece.

“We actually would say we encouraged them to go, because his brother made it, and there was no other hope,” he told NPR’s Rachel Martin in an emotional interview. “We don’t see the war ending in Syria; life in Turkey is hopeless.”

Funding the journey is a decision he and his wife both deeply regret, he says. Their nephews drowned with their mother in the Mediterranean earlier this week, and photos of the body of 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi were published around the world, bringing renewed attention to the plight of refugees from Syria’s civil war.

“They were happy little boys,” he says. “The little boy, the littlest boy, was so excited to get on the boat. He was going to a new place.”

Listen to the full interview using the player above.

Article source: http://www.npr.org/2015/09/04/437597010/for-family-of-drowned-syrian-boy-there-was-no-other-hope-uncle-says?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

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