Mediterranean Sea – On the open sea, 1000’s of kilometres from land, on a flimsy blue picket boat, 21-year-old Linda* from Daraa, Syria, didn’t care if she lived or died.
She and 125 different refugees had left the Libyan coastal metropolis of Sabratha in the dead of night of night time, and her solely purpose was to get her sick mom to security – away from the warfare again house, away from the freezing sea that they had been drifting in for practically two days with no meals or water.
Then their boat was intercepted by German search-and-rescue vessel Humanity 1 – and Linda, her mom and the others had been saved.
Within the first chaotic hours after the rescue, she walked across the open deck, crying. Wearing a black tracksuit with white stripes, she zigzagged between individuals queuing for a change of clothes and an extended line of frozen survivors ready to see the ship’s physician.
A few of them had been wrapped in shiny aluminium emergency blankets. After they moved, the sound reminded her of opening sweet baggage when she was a bit lady.
Grabbing one of many crew members, her eyebrows furrowed in an effort to carry again tears, Linda whispered in Arabic: “Can I please cost my cellphone? I have to ship a message.” She held out an iPhone with a cracked display screen and traces of salt dried onto it.
She had been out of contact for 22 hours, so her fiancé of three weeks – nonetheless caught in a Libyan smuggling shelter – didn’t know if she was lifeless or alive.
When she was informed she must wait just a few hours, her tears spilled over.