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Greek former model describes rescue of Syrian refugee close to death in Aegean Sea
Sandra Tsiligeridu, an ex-model, and her friends were sailing when they spotted Mohamed Besmar, close to dying from exhaustion.

A Greek tourist Sandra Tsiligeridu has shared an image of the moment she and a group of friends reportedly rescued a Syrian refugee who had spent 13 hours in the sea off the Greek island of Pserimos. The man, named Mohamed, had been clinging to a life vest after becoming separated from a boat carrying 39 of his compatriots which had set sail from Turkey.

The moment Sandra Tsiligeridu and a group of friends reportedly rescued a Syrian refugee

By Nick Squires, Rome4:19PM BST 02 Sep 2015


A Syrian refugee who was close to dying from exhaustion after drifting for 13 hours in the Aegean was rescued by a Greek woman and her friends who happened to be passing in their speedboat.
The dramatic story emerged as Turkish authorities said at least 11 refugees, believed to be Syrian, drowned on Wednesday when their two boats sank near the Greek island of Kos.

Mohammed Besmar was on his last reserves of strength after being in the water for 13 hours when he was spotted, by chance, by Sandra Tsiligeridu, an ex-model and actress, and her friends as they sailed their twin-engine motor boat between Kos and the island of Pserimos, close to the Turkish border.

Thousands of Syrians, Afghans and other refugees have made the perilous crossing of the narrow strait between the Turkish coast and islands such as Kos, Samos and Lesbos in recent weeks.
Mr Besmar was on one such dinghy during a pre-dawn crossing on August 27 when one of the 40 migrants on board accidentally dropped an oar into the water.

He volunteered to dive in and retrieve it but the sea was rough and he found himself dragged away by strong currents, unable to swim back to the dinghy. His fellow Syrian refugees just had time to throw him a life jacket before he disappeared in the darkness.

He drifted for hours and had given up hope of being rescued when he was spotted by Ms Tsiligeridu and her husband, Dimitri, a doctor, who at first thought the man in the water was a diver or snorkeler.
He slowed down the boat so as to avoid hitting the man but realised, as he approached closer, that the person was in extreme difficulties.
The Greek couple and their friends hauled the refugee out of the water. He was suffering from hypothermia and they wrapped him in towels and a jacket.

A photo of Ms Tsiligeridu cradling Mr Besmar was later posted on Facebook and has now attracted praise from as far afield as Australia and the US.

“He was nearly unconscious when we found him,” Ms Tsiligeridu said on her Facebook page, where the photo has garnered thousands of comments, shares and ‘likes’.

“He had sacrificed himself for his friends (by diving in to retrieve the oar),” the mother of three wrote. “We found him 13 hours later.”

In an interview with La Repubblica newspaper, Ms Tsiligeridu, 42, denied that she was a heroine.

“I only did what any other human being would have done. Anyone else in my position would have done the same thing.

“He was trembling from hypothermia. He only managed to say, in English, ‘My name is Mohammed Besmar and I come from Syria.’ We wrapped towels around him to try to warm him up. We took him to Kos as quickly as we could.

“Before coming to the islands this summer I had no idea how bad the situation was. “The island is full of migrants, thousands of them are arriving every day. They sleep in tents in the street, they have no lavatories they can use, they are in a pitiful condition. Where are the European institutions in all this?

“When I was snorkelling with my daughter off Pserimos, we saw on the seabed some baby’s clothes and Iraqi bank notes. And there was a damaged boat, right there on the beach. Women and children had probably landed there just a couple of hours before we arrived.”
Mr Besmar was given medical help and now wants to reach Athens, from where he will continue his journey to western Europe.

In a Facebook message, he wrote: "I’m very sorry for having entered Greece illegally, but I had no other way of fleeing from the war that has destroyed my country. I was in the water for hours and I thought I was finished when the boat approached and Sandra saved me. I cannot find the words to thank her and the other people on board."

See touching Facebook photo at this link:

www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/...efugee-close-to-death-in-Aegean-Sea.html [telegraph.co.uk]

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Glory to God! Thanks for sharing smile

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I have the greatest sympathy for those folks. However, it seems to me that the Muslim faith is both a religion and a political system. How to separate the two and keep out terrorists? I don't know.

The other thing that really gets to me, is that our own inept leadership has done little but exacerbate problems in that region both by actions, and the lack of them.

Also, no country, Greece especially, has unlimited resources. Many countries are being overwhelmed by this and have no solutions. Given economic realities, even we in the U.S. can not solve all the world's ills.

I am keeping up the prayers that I will continue to pray up until the next election. I pray for a leader who is godly, puts the best interests of the country and its people ahead of politics, and who is a genuine statesman - something we haven't had in far too long.

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Originally Posted by byzanTN
I have the greatest sympathy for those folks. However, it seems to me that the Muslim faith is both a religion and a political system. How to separate the two and keep out terrorists? I don't know.

The other thing that really gets to me, is that our own inept leadership has done little but exacerbate problems in that region both by actions, and the lack of them.

Also, no country, Greece especially, has unlimited resources. Many countries are being overwhelmed by this and have no solutions. Given economic realities, even we in the U.S. can not solve all the world's ills.

I am keeping up the prayers that I will continue to pray up until the next election. I pray for a leader who is godly, puts the best interests of the country and its people ahead of politics, and who is a genuine statesman - something we haven't had in far too long.

I agree on all points.

It is curious how I have read that the U.S. has not been helpful with the plight of Christian Syrian refugees. frown

Obviously, they are not and will not be terrorists in the name of their religion.

Best,
Alice

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Are the real refugees getting out or are most of these terrorists?

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Originally Posted by Carson Daniel
Are the real refugees getting out or are most of these terrorists?
This is a joke, right?

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The Melkite Patriarch kind of drives emigration home.

.
THE TRAGEDY OF SYRIAN EMIGRATION
[melkite.org]



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Ok, Tell me how many are Christians? What percentage of the "refugees" are young men vs. women and children? Tell us why so many of the "refugees" are attacking the very people who are trying to help them?

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Pani Rose,

I agree completely with the cry of the Patriarch who I'd guess lives not in Syria (actually I know where he lives) but in the safety of the US. I join him in prayer. Martyrdom is a good thing. Actually all suffering when offered to God can bring about good. Perhaps the continued martyrdom of Christians in he Arab world will bring about a new evangelization. The Blood of the Martyrs are indeed the seed of the Church. Who knows? Juliana Taimaroozy, a Chaldean who founded Iraqi Christian Relief did at least until recently had prayed for a Christian area in the Ninevah Valley. I will try to find out what she hopes for today, now that much of Northern Iraq has been run over and Iran is hoping to overwhelm much of the rest of it. It's not Syria but thousands of Christians fled from Iraq to Syria and are now being butchered by ISIS.


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