Cover image for The new odyssey : the story of the twenty-first-century refugee crisis
The new odyssey : the story of the twenty-first-century refugee crisis
Title:
The new odyssey : the story of the twenty-first-century refugee crisis
Personal Author:
Publication Date as Range:
2016-2017
ISBN:
9781631492556
Edition:
First American edition.
Physical Description:
xiii, 351 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Contents:
Prologue -- A birthday interrupted -- The second sea -- Trading in souls -- SOS -- Shipwreck -- Promised land? -- Between the woods and the water -- To Sweden -- A gate clangs shut -- Status pending -- Epilogue: what happened next? -- A message from Hashem al-Souki -- Author's note -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Index.
Abstract:
On the day of his son's fourteenth birthday, Hashem al-Souki lay somewhere in the Mediterrandean, crammed in a wooden dinghy. His family was relatively safe--at least for the time being--in Egypt, where they had only just settled after fleeing their war-torn Damascus home three years prior. Traversing these unforgiving waters and the treacherous terrain that would follow was worth the slim chance of securing a safe home for his children in Europe. If he failed, at least he would fail alone. Hashem's story is tragically common, as desperate victims continue to embark on deadly journeys in search of freedom. Tracking the harrowing experiences of these brave refugees, The New Odyssey finally illuminates the shadowy networks that have facilitated the largest forced exodus since the end of World War II. The Guardian's first-ever migration correspondent, Patrick Kingsley has traveled through seventeen countries to put an indelible face on this overwhelming disaster. Embedding himself alongside the refugees, Kingsley reenacts their flight with hundreds of people across the choppy Mediterranean in the hopes of better understanding who helps or hinders their path to salvation. From the starving migrants who push through sandstorms with children strapped to their backs to the exploitative criminals who prey on them, from the smugglers who dangerously ignore the limits of their cargo space to the volunteers who uproot their own lives to hand out water bottles--what emerges is a kaleidoscope of humanity in the wake of tragedy. By simultaneously tracing the narrative of Hashem, who endures the trek not once but twice, Kingsley creates a compassionate, visceral portrait of the mass migration in both its epic scope and its heartbreaking specificity. Exposing the realities of this modern-day odyessy as well as the moral shortcomings evident in our own indifference, the result is a crucial call to arms and an unprecedented exploration of a world we too often choose not to know.
Holds: