Commentary: Sharing the stories of refugees
By Tacy Surrett*
Living overseas for most of my life has given me some of the most amazing and challenging experiences, as well as some incredible opportunities.
Perhaps the greatest of these is my work with refugees from Iraq, Iran, Syria, Turkmenistan
The refugee crisis is not new. It has been happening since the beginning of civilization. Humans are forced out of their countries and struggle to survive elsewhere with hopes that they one day will be able to return to the place they call “home.”
As I was considering how to help people for my Girl Scout Gold Award Project, I remember thinking, “How can my gifts be used for good and for love in the world around me?”
At the time, my family and I volunteered at a local distribution center that aids refugees in a poor part of Turkey’s capital, Ankara. As I handed out food, I decided to walk around and talk to people, soak in their stories and admire their bravery.
One night, as I handed out cookies to families entering the building, a man approached my father and me. He asked my dad, probably one of the first Americans he had encountered in his traumatic experience thus far, why he couldn’t just “make America take revenge on the people that killed his father.”
After speaking with him for a while, we soon saw the rage and anger in this man’s eyes turn to pain and sorrow. He told us his sick mother knew nothing about the death of his other family members. They feared she would die in shock. Back in Iraq, the man’s father and some of his siblings lay buried under the rubble of their family store in Mosul.
I felt so distraught by his story that I went straight home and wrote my second monologue — my first was about an Iranian family I had become friends
I began to do this every week, drafting poem after poem based on interviews and conversations with refugees. Eventually, I created an exhibit with portraits and monologues, titled “Small Ships with Large Hearts.” The title came from a line in one of my poems, “Waves,” a tribute to the thousands of fleeing refugees who died in maritime disasters.
I displayed and performed my exhibit in Ankara, but I also was passionate about sharing these experiences with congregations and organizations in the United States.
Since returning to the U.S. in 2016, I have brought my exhibit to Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, seeking to educate people about the heartbreaking tragedies that take place thousands of miles away every day and to inspire them with the refugees’ stories of survival and resilience.
I feel an obligation and responsibility to carry their burden with me and to share it with others so that they too may make a difference in the lives of displaced people around the world, whether it be donating time, money or just by accepting their struggle.
Most of all, I feel the pull of God to be the fingertips of love, peace
Courtesy photo of Tacy Surrett with her Girl Scout Gold Award.