Politics

Tears, a tissue, and iPhone photos – an Afghan softens a Turkish heart


Stuck in Istanbul’s epic traffic, my taxi driver launches into a rant blaming refugees for Turkey’s every problem – inflation, unaffordable rents, unemployment, and now the Feb. 6 earthquake that has killed more than 54,000 people in Turkey and Syria. He believes viral videos suggesting refugees are looting bodies under the rubble.

Somehow, I expected the earthquake to have a unifying effect. But, mourning and on edge, Turks want a scapegoat.  

Why We Wrote This

Anti-immigrant sentiment in Turkey, amplified by February’s earthquake, has left the country on edge. But in a tearful conversation, our Afghan correspondent glimpsed new respect from her Turkish cabdriver.

“We’re not the thieves,” I say in broken Turkish, picked up in my seven years working as a foreign reporter and raising my two daughters in culturally diverse and cosmopolitan Istanbul. “We also died with you.”  

My cabbie asks which Afghans died under the rubble. I let him scroll my smartphone photos of the refugee Qaderi family whose extended family once housed me in my native Afghanistan when I needed a home. Half of them were killed in the collapse of their Anatolian apartment building in the quake just days before their appointment for resettlement in New York.   

He offers condolences – and glimpsing sympathy, I burst into tears over the quake, discrimination, and years of loss in my homeland. 

He fumbles, hands me a tissue, and says: “Turkey’s your home as much as it is mine.”  

Stuck in Istanbul’s epic traffic on a bridge crossing from Asia to Europe on the fabled Bosporus Strait, my cab driver launches into a charged monologue about refugees destroying Turkey. 

He says Afghan refugees are stealing from bodies under the rubble of the Feb. 6 earthquake in southern Turkey, referring to a viral video accusing Afghans of stealing gold and cutting the arms off the dead. But the Turkish influencer, Ugur Kardas, who made the video was later arrested for spreading disinformation.

“We are not the thieves. We also died with you,” I say in my broken Turkish.  

Why We Wrote This

Anti-immigrant sentiment in Turkey, amplified by February’s earthquake, has left the country on edge. But in a tearful conversation, our Afghan correspondent glimpsed new respect from her Turkish cabdriver.

No matter what I say or what the truth is, the cabbie believes that refugees are the reason for Turkey’s every problem – inflation, unaffordable rents, unemployment, and now the biggest natural disaster of the century that killed more than 54,000 people in Turkey and Syria. 

Istanbul’s been my home for seven years. But the anti-foreign sentiment has become so ominous that I have to prove my loyalty in public. The perennial question is: Where are you from? Upcoming elections don’t give refugees any reprieve; nearly every party is against them, and kicking out migrants seems politically popular.

Courtesy of the Qaderi family

Bahar Qaderi (right) with her father, Mohammed Amin Qaderi. Both died in the Feb. 6 earthquake in Adiyaman, Turkey, one month shy of Bahar’s 11th birthday.

I was born in Afghanistan, and raised partly in the U.S. I moved here to work as a foreign reporter and to raise my two daughters. Istanbul is a culturally diverse, cat-loving, family-friendly, geographically accessible cosmopolitan hub. People were generally welcoming toward Afghans until a wave of migration beginning in 2015 turned Turkey against us. Tens of thousands have moved on to Europe but about 200,000 Afghans legally remain in Turkey – some 144,000 of them are refugees waiting for asylum elsewhere. Afghans are second only to Syrians as the largest refugee population in Turkey. The worst-hit targets of discrimination are Syrians, then us.



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