
5 Afghan siblings arrive in Toronto more than a year after being stuck in limbo in UAE refugee camp
CBC
Faisal Rasel remembers the moment his father was killed by the Taliban in 2018 for working with the U.S. government. He knew that from then on, he would have to be the one to look after his four siblings. Their mother had died several years prior.
But when Kabul fell to the Taliban in August 2021, Rasel, 17 at the time, worried they would come after his orphaned siblings.
"It was a bad dream," Rasel said.
"I was very worried about the future of my siblings because the Taliban wanted to kill [them]."
The five siblings managed to escape Kabul where they were under potential danger and hid in a different province in Afghanistan as they looked for a way to escape the country. He said he didn't think his siblings would be able to survive and flee the country.
After reaching out to his father's friends and organizations across the world, the Jewish Humanitarian Response helped them get on a flight out of Afghanistan within weeks. Rasel didn't know at the time that the five siblings would first land in Abu Dhabi — where they were forced to wait in limbo for more than a year at Humanitarian City, a refugee camp in the United Arab Emirates.
"We had no idea where we would end up," he said.
After waiting for 13 months, Rasel found out they were accepted to Canada and arrived in Toronto on Nov. 22.
"Now we [can] think of our future ... there are a lot of opportunities for me and for my siblings," he said. "I'm very happy."
Rabbi Levi Landa first learned about Rasel's story in October 2021, when the Jewish Humanitarian Response (JHR) was created in the aftermath of the Taliban takeover.
He said he knew immediately that the organization needed to do everything possible to get the siblings safely to another country.
"There was this 18-year-old boy, his mother had passed away, the father had been murdered by the Taliban and he had been left caring for his siblings and that he was desperate for someone to help him escape Afghanistan," Landa told CBC Toronto.
"For a lot of Jewish people who have similar stories in their own history, seeing somebody in a similar situation, it was just like, let's see if there's anything at all that we might be able to do," he said.
Landa said the organization's network of volunteers was able to get the siblings out of Afghanistan and into a refugee camp in the UAE.













