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    The Girl from Aleppo

    Page 21
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      disability, 23–4, 27–8, 32–3, 130, 221

      ‘disability benefits’, 46, 69, 90, 152, 175, 216, 224

      and execution of Saddam Hussein, 136, 148

      experience in Slovenia, 189–201

      favourite colour, 3, 258

      favourite saying, 31

      fear of flying, 127–8

      goes on school trip, 253–5

      imagines European future, 188

      impressions of Germany, 233–6, 239

      journey to Hungary, 173–85

      journey to Lesbos, 1–8, 139–60

      journey to Macedonia, 166–72

      learns Arabic, 28, 59

      learns German, 207, 224, 234, 254, 258

      leaves Gaziantep, 113–15

      leaves Syria, 104–9

      leg operation, 38, 41–3

      and marriage, 246

      meaning of her name, 13

      meets Shiar for first time, 91

      and Mustafa’s wedding, 96–7

      ‘Nujeen principles’, 31, 135, 239

      and reading, 89–91, 101

      recognised from photograph, 190

      Rhine trip, 263

      speaks English, 99, 115, 148, 151, 154, 157, 177, 180, 184, 242, 265

      suffers asthma, 24, 27–8, 58, 169

      Nuremberg, 218

      Obama, Barack, 117

      O’Brien, Stephen, 256

      Öcalan, Abdullah, 195

      Oliver, John, 225

      Oman, 48

      Orbán, Viktor, 179, 181

      Orhan (cousin), 17

      Ottoman Empire, 15

      Pakistan, 12

      Palestinian family, 199–200

      Palmyra, 117, 119, 255

      Panarbora park, 253–4

      Paris attacks, 237–9, 256

      Pegida, 248

      people smugglers, 134–6

      Perišče, 192

      Pharaoh and the Sphinx, 241–2

      Picot, Georges, 15

      Pikpa camp, 155

      PKK, 83, 195

      Plato, 4

      Political Security Directorate, 50

      Poseidon, 145–6

      Postojna Centre, 194, 201

      Power, Samantha, 260

      Prince (rebel commander), 80

      Princip, Gavrilo, 75, 175

      al-Qaeda, 73

      Qatar, 58, 65

      quarks, 263

      quiz shows, 40–1, 109

      Ramadan, 65, 69–70, 72, 78, 136, 257–8

      Raqqa, 53, 94, 102, 257

      refugees, suffocated in truck, 203, 209

      Reker, Henriette, 235–6, 263

      rihlat al-moot (route of death), 8

      Road to Aleppo, 92

      Rodrigo, Concierto de Aranjuez, 102

      Rosenheim, 217

      Röszke, 178

      S., Frank, 235–6, 263–4

      St Paul, 4

      St Petersburg, 253

      Saladin, 16

      salep, 21

      Salzburg, 212

      Samar, 78

      Samos, 125

      Sardar (aid-worker), 152–3, 158

      Saudi Arabia, 48, 58, 65, 95

      Schengen Agreement, 121

      Scott, James, 115, 226, 247

      Scud missiles, 86

      Second World War, 75, 266

      Seehofer, Horst, 219

      Serbia, 123–4, 171–4, 179–80, 187, 238

      shabiha, 63, 66

      Shamsa (aunt), 85–6, 103, 118–20

      Sharm El-Sheikh, 48

      Shereen (aunt), 130, 145, 149, 161, 223

      Shia prayers, 194–5

      Shiar (brother), 13–14, 19–21, 24–5, 43

      his daughter, 33, 93

      and family’s leaving Syria, 108, 110, 115

      filming in Syria, 91–3, 95, 99

      flies to Athens, 163–5

      and Nujeen’s arrival in Germany, 219–21, 223, 236

      and Syrian revolution, 66, 69

      transfers money, 134

      SIA refugees, 169, 171

      SIM cards, 156

      Six Day War, 50

      Skala Sikamineas, 150

      Slovenia, 185, 187, 189–201, 204–5, 212

      Slumdog Millionaire, 109

      smoking, 27

      Sofia, 122–3

      Somalia, 12

      Soros, George, 243

      Sound of Music, The, 211

      Spielfeld, 205

      Sriaa (tortoise), 38–40

      Stalin, Josef, 59–60

      Streets of Freedom, 80

      suicide bombers, 237–8

      Sweeney, Alison, 115, 226–7

      Sykes, Mark, 15

      Syrian National Council, 106

      Tahrir Square, 46

      Talabani, Jalal, 55

      Taliban, 216

      Tehran, 16

      tennis, 41

      Thatcher, Margaret, 259

      Thessaloniki, 166–7

      Thutmose, Pharaoh, 241–2

      time dilation, 166

      Tishrin dam, 13

      Tomislav, King, 189

      tortoises, 38–40

      torture, 50

      Tower of London, 253

      Treaty of Sèvres, 15

      Tripoli, 57

      Tunisia, 48, 56

      Turkification policy, 17

      Turkomans, 58

      UAE, 117

      UN Convention on Refugees, 122

      UNHCR, 171, 177, 193, 262

      vendettas, 97

      Victoria, Queen, 11, 115–17

      Victoria and Albert Museum, 156

      Vienna, 124, 203

      von Trapp family, 211–12

      Walking, 19

      Wesseling, 231, 254

      Who Wants to be a Millionaire?, 40

      William, Prince, 96, 194

      wristbands, 206–7, 217–18

      Würzburg attack, 264

      Yaba (father), 13, 16, 18, 21, 38, 267

      and family’s return to Manbij, 77–8, 84

      and Nujeen’s arrival in Germany, 215, 246

      and Nujeen’s departure, 114

      and Nujeen’s disability, 24, 32

      returns to Aleppo for belongings, 86–7

      sadness for Syria, 257

      and Syrian revolution, 53–4, 58, 61, 63–5, 69

      and tortoise, 39–40

      Yarmouk, 199

      Yazidis, 117, 193, 198, 256

      Yemen, 48

      YPG, 57, 65, 68, 101, 118, 120, 257

      Zagreb, 188–9

      Zenobia, Queen, 116–17, 137

      Zorba the Greek, 13

      Zuckerberg, Mark, 115

      Zuhak and Kawa, 17, 36

      Žumberački put, 191

      Photos Section

      Me and my brother Bland – he has been with me for every important event of my life.

      At home in Manbij 2002 (aged three) in a special white dress Yaba (my father) bought me as a gift back from Mecca where he had gone on the Haj pilgrimage.

      On the terrace of our apartment in Aleppo – my only interaction with the outside world.

      At Newroz 2009 – our traditional Kurdish new year celebrations – which was the only time I ever went out. We were made by the regime to go to a rocky place outside the city.

      Yaba (my dad) and Ayee (my mum) in traditional Kurdish dress.

      Me and my mother on the edge of the Queiq river dam for a family picnic in 2009. The river flows through Aleppo and in 2013 was the scene of an awful massacre when 110 corpses appeared shot in the head.

      Here I am at a family barbecue on the bank of the Euphrates river celebrating Newroz 2011, just before revolution then war swept the country.

      After a series of operations in 2010.

      LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

      President Bashar al-Assad and his British-born wife Asma in 2003. When he took over in 2000 after the death of his father Hafez, we had great hopes but they soon faded.

      RAMZI HAIDAR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

      Aleppo, with its ancient fortress in the background.

      GEORGE OURFALIAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES


      Much of the city has now been turned to rubble and hundreds of thousands of people have fled.

      JOHN CANTLIE / GETTY IMAGES

      Some of the biggest demonstrations against the regime in 2011 took place in Hama after Friday prayers in July and were brutally put down; the city had been the scene of a crackdown by Hafez al-Assad in 1987 which left around 10,000 people dead.

      HANDOUT / ALAMY STOCK PHOTO

      Daesh militants moved into Syria in 2014 and set up their capital in Raqqa.

      IVOR PRICKETT / UNHCR

      Arriving on the beach in Lesbos after crossing in a dinghy from Turkey on 2 September 2015.

      ZELJKO LUKUNIC / PIXSELL / PIXSELL / PA IMAGES

      Being taken away by Croatian police in a prison van – we were terrified we would be fingerprinted and forced to apply for asylum there.

      Talking to BBC reporter Fergal Keane on our journey through Serbia – I told him I wanted to be an astronaut.

      The Serbian-Hungarian border – we got there just as Hungary closed the fence and stopped letting people cross, leaving us stranded and forced to find another route.

      In Germany at last, but waiting in a queue for five hours for a bus to a camp. Nasrine’s brithday, 21 September 2015.

      Tired, bored and wanting to see my brother! In a refugee camp in the German city of Rosenheim.

      Reunited! Nasrine and I with Bland in our new home in Wesseling.

      SILEV MOHAMMED

      Everything smashed and broken: my home in Aleppo, Christmas 2016.

      Lourenço Anunciação

      At Cologne Zoo, looking at the animals I knew about from the documentaries I used to watch all day and night in Aleppo.

      Playing wheelchair basketball in my new chair in Germany, June 2016.

      Exiled from their country; my brother Mustafa and my parents in Gaziantep, April 2016. I miss them terribly.

      About the Author

      CHRISTINA LAMB is one of the world’s leading foreign correspondents. Author of Farewell Kabul and coauthor of the New York Times bestseller I Am Malala, she has reported on Pakistan and Afghanistan since 1987. Educated at Oxford and Harvard, she is the author of five books and has won a number of awards, including Britain’s Foreign Correspondent of the Year five times, as well as the Prix Bayeux-Calvados, Europe’s most prestigious award for war correspondents. She works for the Sunday Times, and lives in London and Portugal with her husband and son.

      Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at hc.com.

      Credits

      Cover layout design HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2017

      Cover photograph © STR/AFP / Getty Images

      Copyright

      First U.S. hardcover edition was published in 2016 under the title Nujeen by HarperCollins Publishers.

      THE GIRL FROM ALEPPO. Copyright © 2016 by Christina Lamb and Nujeen Mustafa. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

      FIRST HARPER WAVE PAPERBACK EDITION PUBLISHED 2017.

      All photographs from the Mustafa family collection unless otherwise credited

      ISBN 978-0-06-256774-1 (pbk.)

      EPub Edition October 2017 ISBN 978-0-06-282125-6

      About the Publisher

      Australia

      HarperCollins Publishers Australia Pty. Ltd.

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      Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

      www.harpercollins.com.au

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      United Kingdom

      HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

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      London SE1 9GF, UK

      www.harpercollins.co.uk

      United States

      HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

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      New York, NY 10007

      www.harpercollins.com

     

     

     



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