
Exodus
Season 2016 Episode 15 | 1h 54m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
The first-person stories of refugees and migrants fleeing war and persecution for Europe.
“Exodus,” a two-hour FRONTLINE special, tells the first-person stories of refugees and migrants fleeing war, persecution and hardship — drawing on footage filmed by the families themselves as they leave their homes on dangerous journeys in search of safety and refuge in Europe.
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Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Exodus
Season 2016 Episode 15 | 1h 54m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
“Exodus,” a two-hour FRONTLINE special, tells the first-person stories of refugees and migrants fleeing war, persecution and hardship — drawing on footage filmed by the families themselves as they leave their homes on dangerous journeys in search of safety and refuge in Europe.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship>> NARRATOR: Tonight, on Frontline... >> Nobody wants to leave their country and risk dying in the sea.
>> NARRATOR: The human stories of a global crisis.
>> But when it becomes impossible to live in your own country, people will do desperate things.
>> NARRATOR: Ahmad, a student.
>> I am a refugee.
I just look like you.
I've got family, I've got dreams.
>> NARRATOR: Isra'a, a child from Aleppo.
Hassan, a teacher.
>> Anyone can become a refugee... anyone.
Oh, my God.
It's not something which you choose, it's something that happens to you.
>> NARRATOR: Tonight, a Frontline special presentation: "Exodus."
(wind whipping) >> In 2015, over one million people smuggled themselves into Europe.
(whimpering) >> For a year, we followed some of their extraordinary journeys across 26 countries.
>> We filmed them as they left their homes and families behind.
(bell ringing) >> Across continents, all the way to their final destinations.
>> And they used camera phones to record the places no one else could go.
This is the story of those journeys, told by the people who risked everything for the dream of a better life.
>> I survived ISIS, I survived beheadings, I survived Assad.
(explosion) >> Allahu akbar!
>> I survived shellings, I survived the sea.
I survived everything.
I was almost killed for a stupid idea called the U.K. (din of crowd) MAN: (explosions) (shouting) WOMAN: >> In Izmir, finding a smuggler wasn't hard.
They're everywhere.
The very first night we got there, I was walking in Basmane Square, and they approach you, being like, "So you want to go to Greece?"
As if you're...
This is human trafficking, but it's just...
It was that easy.
MEN: >> They portray it to you as if you're going on a five-stars yacht into the island, and you'll be fine.
"Don't worry about it."
But they are...
They lie.
They are full of lies.
I was scared, to be honest.
That area is full of wrong things.
Human traffickers.
People who ended up on the side of the road selling things to carry on with their journeys.
The worst part of it is to make fake life jackets.
Because we later found out that the majority of them make the person sink instead of float.
TAREK: ISRA'A: TAREK: >> At dawn this morning, this group came ashore... >> The islands have seen a huge rise in migrant arrivals.
>> Flimsy inflatables... >> ...called to safety... >> ...last 24 hours, more than 40 have died trying to... >> But these are desperate people, many trying to leave countries in conflict.
>> Eight were found this morning.
>> At least 22 people were killed.
>> ...drowned trying to cross from Turkey.
>> The image of Alan Kurdi's body washing up at this spot has profoundly shocked this country.
TAREK: (baby crying) TAREK: TAREK: >> Syrians who have already done the journey posted on Facebook, and they estimated that it'll cost around 5,000 euros.
Some people are like, "How can they afford that?
The refugees, how come they have that much money?"
Not knowing that refugees fled Syria not because they're poor.
They had money, but it's not safe for them to live there anymore.
And refugees, a lot of them, they sold their properties to do this journey.
They literally sold their properties.
Sold their houses, their shops, their cars.
(muffled chatter) >> Practicing for tonight.
(laughter) One, two, go.
WOMAN: (car horns honking) WOMAN: WOMAN: BOY: (baby crying) >> Before we took our journey, we heard that there was a boat which five people died, because the boat went down and five people died.
And you wish you could do something about it, you wish you can change this, but you can't.
I was helpless back then.
We're still waiting for the truck.
It's supposed to arrive to pick the rest of us, around 20 to 30 people, 30 people in here to the point.
I don't know why it's been...
It hasn't been...
It's a bit windy, it's a bit windy today.
According to the application, wave heights are going to stay less than 60 centimeters.
You don't actually believe that your boat is going to go down and we're going to die, it should be fine.
(quietly): It's 2:10.
We're heading to the point.
We got there and we were around 90 people.
I was, like, "Well, that's going to be great.
"If they split us in half, we'll be 45 on the boat, that'll be great."
First boat is on.
They put around 35 people on one boat, and they were, like, "Go!"
And what scared me the most is that they asked one of the refugees, one of the people who are going to go on the boat, they were, like, "Come, we will train you on how to operate the engine."
And I was, like, "Oh, my God."
Because this is someone who has no idea, he has never done this, and they train him in, like, three minutes.
And there was around 60 people left and there was one boat.
This is not going to go right, this is not going to be okay.
(muffled talk) MAN: >> Allahu akbar.
Allahu akbar.
WOMAN: MAN: WOMAN: HASSAN: MAN: MAN: WOMAN: >> Oh, my God!
(many people speaking at once) MAN: (talking, children crying) MAN: >> There was a kid who was sitting right in front of me on the boat.
(sighs) It's just seeing... seeing the fear, and it's not...
I mean, for some...
I mean, I mean, we're, we're young men, we can have it, we can do it, but to see that, like, to see that kids are going through this, and they're crying for help, and they're pleading for you to help them or do something...
He was, like, literally, it was just, like, "Do something," and he was crying.
To see, to witness that is just hard.
After half an hour, the coast guards showed up, the Turkish coast guards showed up, and they... (sighs) We all got on the... We were rescued, all of us.
Luckily, no one died.
No one drowned.
And we were taken back to the coast guard's station.
The treatment was good, they gave us food and water.
And then after a while, we... After they took our information, they released us after, like, a couple of... couple of hours.
And we went back to Izmir.
Back to square one.
Nobody wants to leave their country and risk dying in the sea.
But when it becomes impossible to live in your own country, people will do desperate things.
(car horns honking) (explosion) (honking, gunfire) (gunfire, shouting) (shouting) (child crying) >> Allahu akbar.
Allahu akbar.
>> Mama!
Mama!
WOMAN: TAREK: (laughter) ISRA'A: WOMAN: (ship horn blows) TAREK: TAREK: ISRA'A: TAREK: ISRA'A: (engines puttering) (car horns honking) Chop-chop.
(laughs) WOMAN: >> They are my sisters, you know.
WOMAN: >> The family.
>> Yeah, it's my family.
Europe, Europe, Europe, Europe.
ALAIGIE: >> Nine, six, eight, four, nine, two, five, eight.
>>... five, eight.
MAN: >> Is this for the back way?
>> Which is about?
>> 2,000 euro.
>> 2,000 euro?
>> Yeah, 2,000 euro.
ALAIGIE: >> Are you scared?
>> No, I'm not scared.
>> Ill-equipped and overcrowded boats run by trafficking... >> Over 2,500 people are known to have drowned... >> 25 bodies were recovered.
>> More than a thousand people are feared dead.
>> Up to 4,000 people were rescued from the Mediterranean and brought ashore... >> The Mediterranean has been described as a graveyard for migrants.
>> ...migrants died in two big shipwrecks.
>> So... (many people talking) (music playing, people chatting) So much.
>> After three or four days from being off the grid, we finally made it, finally made it to Greece.
The boat capsized.
We lost all our (bleep), all our bags were gone.
This is where we spent our night last night.
We don't have anything on us.
Especially... especially me, I mean, I only have now my shorts, my t-shirt, and my running shoes.
Everything is lost, basically.
(child screaming) When we landed in Greece, expectations didn't align with reality.
In my mind, I thought it was going to be this organized structure, where there are N.G.O.s, volunteers, people helping out, but it was very chaotic.
A new boat just arrived.
So what people do here, that they steal lifejackets so they can sleep on them.
Because you're basically sleeping on the ground if you're not sleeping on one of them.
I was kind of pampered in Damascus.
Like, I had everything-- I had my car, I could go back to my room, I had my own room, sleeping in my own bed.
I didn't sleep on the side of the road, ever.
Never in my life have I slept on the side of the road, never in my life, actually, I went camping, I never went camping.
I always wanted to, and I think I've done my share of camping by now.
But I just didn't...
I wasn't used to this.
And most of those people were traumatized.
They've left their countries, they almost died on the way.
And no one was there to help out.
No one did actually care.
I was shocked because I thought, like, this was Europe.
I thought it was going to be different.
We had to wait to get a khariter, registration paper with our picture and details on it.
And without this paper, we cannot go anywhere.
(Hassan talking into bullhorn) (excitedly shouts) >> So after they arrived and they asked if someone can speak English, and I took...
I volunteered so I can say the names.
Luckily, our names were included.
We have the khariter, and now we're going to go and book to Athens.
ISRA'A: >> I've never been on a ferry in my life, and we were, like, "Ugh, this is what I would travel in the sea with."
I mean, I don't mind going to Canada on this ferry, because it's legit.
This is how people are supposed to travel, not on a nine-meter dinghy.
We showered on the ferry, we had something to eat.
One of our friends was, like, "Can you sink me now?"
(laughs) >> Do you want to record video?
>> What?
>> You are recording video?
>> Yeah.
>> If you have any question, we can talk with you.
>> Okay.
>> Because I can talk English.
>> Where are you from?
>> I'm from Afghanistan, and we have passed a very difficult way, and finally we arrived in Greece.
>> Where do you want to go?
>> I want to go Finland.
>> Finland?
>> Finland.
When I heard from news that the borders are open and many people are going to abroad, then I decided it is time to go, now or never.
Because the people who are living in Afghanistan, all of them don't like Afghanistan.
But why they stay?
Because they don't know the way how to come, or if they know the way, they don't have the money to come.
I'm sure if they have enough money, nobody will remain in Afghanistan, and Afghanistan will be empty.
Here are the buses which the refugees travel to Macedonia.
And I'm going to find my friend Sadeer.
>> Hi.
>> I'm 24 years old and I faced many problems, I've seen many problems in my life, and it's enough.
I want to have the remain, the rest of my life with peace, with civil life with good situation.
I remember when I was a child, the regime of Taliban.
And everything was bad.
Taliban was very cruel to all human beings.
And especially for women.
There was not right for women in the period of Taliban, no right.
For example, the girls and womens were not allowed to go for job, for work, for studying.
Everything was forbidden for them.
And when they go outside, then it was rule they should cover all the parts of their body, all the parts.
If their hands or feet was uncovered, if a Talib see like that, Talib beat them.
When I was Afghanistan, I saw that Taliban are trying to govern again, and every day, fight is going on.
That is why I decided to leave my home country and come to abroad.
MAN: WOMAN: (crying quietly) (call to prayer) MAN: (people haggling) WOMAN: >> Telephone for sale, telephone for sale.
ALAIGIE: (wind whipping) (car horns honking) >> Me and my wife, we agreed that I will travel to the U.K. and my family will later on join me.
You see if you look at here, we got a lot of numbers.
Smugglers, smugglers, smugglers.
They got groups on Facebook, you know, closed groups, so they keep posting, advertising-- prices, dates, routes, discounts-- promotion, you know.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Do you know where the Omonia Square is?
>> That way.
>> That way?
Five minutes?
Sorry, Omonia Square?
Right here?
Thank you so much.
Good evening, sir.
Do you know where is the Omonia Square?
>> Five minutes.
>> Thank you so much.
Okay, I mean, everybody says five minutes, and I don't know what's the meaning of five minutes in Greece.
(car horn honking) >> Bye.
Well, (bleep), it's better you turn it off.
Because they will be... No, please turn it off.
Because if they see the camera, if they see me, they won't come.
Come on, what are you doing?
>> Okay.
>> Smugglers are criminals.
For them, I am not a human being.
I am $500 or $1,000 or $2,000.
I didn't have a choice but to come and work with these people.
(children shouting) Time is my worst enemy.
Sometimes a minute can change the entire life of you or your family.
This is the picture of my little daughter and my wife.
You see the building out there?
There was a bomb, two little children lost their lives there, in my town.
It's about 200 meters from my house.
(bleep).
(child yells) (children chatting) (coughs) ISRA'A: (horn honks) ISRA'A: (babies crying) (din of large crowd) >> Everybody who is waiting, you can't go there, everybody.
No!
No, sir.
No, no way, stay here, stay here.
(people talking at once) >> Hundreds of men, women, and children waiting in the rain near the border.
>> The authorities and aid agencies seemed completely unprepared... >> Croatian authorities are slowing the flow of migrants being allowed in... >> ...refugees... >> ...more coming hour after hour.
Refugees and migrants have been arriving in Croatia... >> ...still pouring into the European Union... >> ...problem is a lack of coordination.
>> ...blocked their entry to the European Union... >> ...whatever limits and quotas E.U.
leaders may have in mind, this influx is continuing.
>> There was no shelter, no food, no warmth for this group, which included many children.
(laughter) (children cheering) HASSAN: >> I've never traveled to Europe before.
I don't know what's the atmosphere towards refugees.
It didn't feel like we were welcomed by all of those countries we were going through.
We were certainly not welcome.
>> It felt like every country was trying to get rid of us.
Just go north, and then you'll figure it out from there.
>> The backdoor of the van broke, because around 26 people were stacked in the van.
And in an hour and a half, it's going to take us into Austria.
MAN: >> Right now, our van is entering the Austrian borders.
>> It's 9:00, the van just dropped us.
We're in Vienna.
>> I wanted to go to the U.K., and it took me around 14 days, and I'm in Austria.
So, yeah, I mean, like, maximum two more weeks, and I'm...
I'm going to be in the U.K.
But I wasn't.
(laughing) >> With planning my trip to the U.K., I've always wanted to be as quick as possible.
It's amazing, the view, man.
And the system for family reunion in the U.K. is super-quick.
Once I am given the refugee status, I can get my family easily out of Syria, which might take me 2 1/2 years in Germany or France.
>> My place was under siege.
There was no electricity.
The reception towers, they were all blown up.
I spend sometimes two, three weeks never hearing from them.
Sorry, I'm...
But it really is very urgent that I'm taking the advantage that she's got reception, so I'm trying to text her, you know.
(sighs) For first time in month.
(Skype tone playing) Hello?
Hello?
Hello?
Hello?
Okay.
Tamam, tamam.
Ciao, ciao.
(line clicks) (clicks tongue) (sighs) She said I need to hang up because I can't even speak.
There are a lot of people around her, you know, and she is very afraid of speaking.
Because now she's in a place under the regime's control, you know, and because I'm stupid, I'm asking her stupid questions about how is the situation, how is ISIS and how is...
So she's... (sighs) Damn it...
So she told me don't speak, type it, so I can type for you, so no one can hear me.
(sighs) I don't know.
(clicks tongue) Oh, I really don't know.
ALAIGIE: (loud explosion, gunshots) >> The route from Libya to Italy is popular, traffickers taking advantage of growing instability and lawlessness in the country.
>> ...armed groups are battling for control of their shattered nation.
>> Chaos, not democracy, filled the gap left by Khaddafi.
>> ...easy for the people smugglers to operate... >> (people talking quickly) >> Hello?
Hello, yes, how are you?
It's Alaigie's sister.
Yes.
>> Hello.
MAN: >> What has happened to Alaigie?
>> How long can he be there for?
MALE RELATIVE: (man shouting) >> Stay with your family, and everybody get in the bus one by one.
(cheers and applause) TAREK: >> I feel relaxed because I'm near to Germany.
Just one country remain.
Austria and then to Germany.
From Germany to Sweden, and from Sweden to my destination, Finland.
>> It is so difficult for the children.
We are young and we cannot suffer this cold weather.
And for children, it's too much difficult.
(babies crying) (cheering) (excited chatter) (ululating) TAREK: (laughing) TAREK: >> Thank you, thank you.
TAREK: (men shouting) >> (Bleep) you!
>> (Bleep) you!
(shouting, whistling) >> (bleep) you!
>> Let us go back, go back.
It's tear gas.
>> Welcome to The Jungle.
I called it the graveyard of hopes or the graveyard of dreams.
Because a lot of people, like, they just lose it there.
They just don't make it.
There was one guy I met, and I was, like, "So how do I get to England?"
And he started laughing.
He literally started laughing.
And he was, like, "I've been here for a year."
And that's when I was, like, "Holy (bleep)."
At first, I was, like, "It's okay, it's a camp.
What's the worst that can happen?"
There's free food and there are showers and toilets, but there's just too much misery in here.
The morning time, I'm thinking of, how am I going to get into the U.K.?
And then at nighttime, I'm trying to enter the U.K.
This is good.
So basically we climb up there.
When I get there, I take off my clothes, put them in a plastic bag, I go down, and then I get into the water.
I swim to the other side till I reach the stairs, dry myself up, put my clothes on, climb up the stairs, wait for the sniffing dogs to be gone, and then hide under the trucks.
The truck takes me to the ferry, and then the ferry moves.
And there you are, U.K.-bound.
(splashing) For a month, I had my friends with me.
But both of them made it on the same day, and I didn't.
And as happy as I was for both of them, in my heart, I was not happy.
They've made it to the U.K. Now I'm on my own.
Before I got close to the ladder, I noticed that there was a maintenance mini-boat that had two people on it very close to the ladder.
I thought, I'm going to get caught.
I'll rest tonight, and then try again tomorrow night.
Walking for around two to three hours every single night, jumping over three fences.
Police is everywhere, they're circling the area.
And then getting caught and being sent back to The Jungle.
That was every single night while I was in Calais.
Three of those times I was on the train, but I would get caught a minute or two before the train starts moving.
I tried the lorries.
That's even harder than the train, because it's very dangerous.
The truck just started moving.
I'm just letting you know.
Ten minutes ago, and it's very, very, very cold, we're almost freezing here.
We've been in the lorry for almost nine hours now, full of Duracell batteries.
It's only three of us, however, we think that the truck is going in the wrong direction, because it's not going towards Calais-- it's going towards Paris.
Let's just hope that we're wrong.
(cries out) (sirens blaring) I shouldn't have risked my life that much, to be honest.
But I was desperate and I had to try everything.
I spent 60 days in Calais.
You never know, maybe, like it's... My mom tells me that, "Hassan, maybe you'll cross to the U.K., "or maybe you won't.
"You won't be successful there.
"Maybe you'll find success somewhere else, so don't just..." I don't know.
(sniffs) (sighs deeply) (sniffs) >> I had a friend who told me there's another possible route to the U.K. >> And we wish you a pleasant journey.
So I said, "All right, I mean, if it's not going to be awful journey."
And he said it's very easy.
You don't have to climb, you don't have to walk, you don't have to worry, there's no police, there's nothing.
You just sit down and you end up in the U.K.
I said, "That easy?"
He said, "Yeah, that easy."
From inside the boat.
Now I am under one of the lorries.
We're just waiting so we can sneak.
These smugglers, they've got a set of tools with them.
They use the tools, they open the back of the lorry.
They put us inside it and they re-lock it again.
The smuggler said, "Don't move.
"If you ever move, they will discover you, then police will come."
Me and my friends, we spent three full days in the back of that lorry, motionless.
And that lorry never moved.
We gave up, we said, "Okay, if at 6:00 PM, "if the lorry does not move, "we are going to call the police, because we cannot stay here anymore."
At 3:00, the lorry started moving.
And we knew that we are on the ferry somewhere in the sea.
Then suddenly the ferry stopped.
I closed my eyes and I started crying, and I started thinking of my family, you know, of my wife, and...
I said, "I've done all this entire journey for my family.
Please, I just want to end up in the U.K." And we turned on our mobiles, and the first message I got on my mobile was, "Welcome to the U.K." I've made it, after almost two months from leaving Syria.
Now I am in the U.K, now my dream is coming true.
So glad, so happy that I made it.
We got out of that lorry.
A car stopped and it turned out that they are the police.
They came with this very strange accent, I didn't understand what they were saying.
"Hello, fella, how you doing?"
It's, like, you know, "Good luck."
I didn't understand.
I said, "Is this England?"
"Yes, this is England, fella."
You know, it was a very different accent.
My plan was to get to the U.K., and I got here.
The next step is to get asylum so I can get my family here safely.
And the sooner I get family reunion, the sooner my family will be leaving Syria.
>> We cannot see.
I think it's gloomy, yep?
>> Gloomy?
>> Gloomy, yeah.
>> It's called fog.
>> Oh.
Yeah, it's gloomy.
But I hope that in Finland should be better than this.
Not like this.
I like the normal weather.
I can see there the refugees.
In Afghanistan, Sweden is a very popular and famous country.
And I was feeling very good that I'm in Sweden, in Europe.
This is me, Sadiq, and I'm in Sweden.
It was very interesting for me, it was...
I had very good feeling.
>> Welcome, man.
>> Okay, thank you.
(laughing) >> So you're going to Finland?
>> Yeah.
>> Okay.
It's going to be cold.
>> Oh.
>> You want?
>> Yeah, thank you, sir.
>> It's cap, and it's... We have clothes in the basement.
>> Okay.
>> If you need.
>> Hi.
>> Hi.
>> Hi, welcome.
Do you need anything?
Over there you have some t-shirts.
Then you have some jackets.
>> Oh, thank you.
(laughing) Oh... Let me to check.
Maybe it's for gals.
>> It's warm.
>> Now I go to Finland.
No.
I many times told my friends, look how European people are good and kind.
We're not working here.
They give us everything what we want.
This is a kind of chips.
(laughing) He said that it is not tasty.
That's why I'm trying to eat fast to finish and have with yogurt.
(laughing) Many thing is new for me.
The culture, the people, it is completely difference from Afghanistan.
No.
Really no tasty.
In here is freedom.
Freedom of everything.
They don't tell us you must be Christian.
And they are saying for us, you're free if you want to pray, if you want to go mosque or what you want to do, you're free.
(camera clicks) Here I realize what is equality.
(train bell dinging) It is great, because men and women are the same.
They are human beings.
We have passed ten countries, ten borders, and just one remain.
(chuckles) I have encouraged them to go to Finland because it is a nice place, and I have never seen any picture from Finland.
(laughing) So, but I know there is a nice place.
I believe it.
Finland is bigger than Germany, but the population is too little, five million.
So we want to get there to increase the population of the country.
(chuckling) I don't know here, it's Finland or Sweden.
Sorry, sir, here is Sweden or Finland?
>> This is Finland, yes.
>> Yes, yeah, it is Finnish.
Here is Finland.
(men shouting) >> I would never have ever thought of going to England if I'd know how bad Calais was.
(explosion) (men shouting) I spent the worst days of my life in Calais.
I (bleep) hate Calais.
A friend of mine knows someone who has around nine people from his family who made it to the U.K. using a fake passport.
He gave me his number, I contacted him, and he was, like, "Send me your pictures, and the passport will be ready in five days."
Tomorrow morning, hopefully, I'll pick up the passport.
If it works, it works.
If it doesn't work, then I've tried everything.
Back in Syria, every time it rains, my mum would say it's a blessful day.
So hopefully, now that it's raining, it's all going to go for the best.
When I think about my memories, when I think about how Syria was...
It is very happy memories.
(laughing and talking) But suddenly, this all disappeared.
Syria has a long past of dictatorship and... (sighs)... corruption and... We did see it coming.
We knew it was going to happen.
(crowd chanting) (clapping, chanting continue) Going on protests in Syria was like going on a suicide mission.
You would go and you may never come back.
Suddenly we were surrounded by military intelligence police, fully armed.
They had iron poles, and as soon as they arrived, they were, like, "Give us your phones, and your..." (sighs): Like, "Empty your pockets, throw them on the floor."
We did.
And they were, like, "Lie down on the floor."
We did.
And there were around 20 minutes of heavy beating.
And they used to hit to deform.
They...
It's... (sighs) (sighs) I, uh... All I used to think about is that I don't want to lose my face.
And I was protecting my face with both of my arms until both of them got very, like, badly broken.
My wrists were shattered.
And they wouldn't stop.
They still wouldn't stop.
And you're screaming for mercy, or pleading for them to stop, but they just wouldn't.
I've got two of my ribs broken, and my left leg was... was heavily damaged.
After that long session of beating, they took us to the station.
(sighs) They put us in a cell.
And things were very ugly there, just... inhumane on many different levels.
(sighs) (sighs) I'm just going to stop for a while.
(crying) (sighs deeply) >> I got here my new passport, and here's my new name, Fredo Nesrova.
(laughing) The smuggler also sent me this via email, which is the boarding pass, the next step... (phone ringing) Oh, sorry.
Hello.
(laughing) (laughing) (phone clicks) Oh, my God.
(laughing) I'm already freaking out.
I shouldn't, but I'm really, really scared.
Fredo, Fredo Nesrova.
>> This is my neighborhood, this is Epsom.
Yep, home sweet home.
I'm living with an English family for the last five weeks.
I posted something on Facebook, and these people just called me, and said, "Please, come live with us."
>> Would you like something?
>> Yes, a cup of tea, please.
>> A cup of tea or coffee?
>> Tea, thank you.
>> With milk?
>> Yes.
>> Turning into an Englishman.
>> Well, yeah, because first when I arrived, I didn't drink the English tea, but now I'm becoming English.
(inhales) My family are living just near the Turkish borders at some point here.
North of my place is under ISIS control.
They need to get to Lebanon, and from Lebanon to Beirut to get to the British embassy to have an interview for family reunion.
And within 24 hours, to leave Lebanon back to Syria.
They're not allowed to stay in Lebanon.
So they will finish the interview, and then go back to Syria again until they hear about the decision of... their application has been accepted or rejected.
It's a very dangerous, horrible journey.
>> (recording): Hello, Daddy.
Daddy.
>> Eva.
My daughter's voice.
(chuckling) You know... Oh, gosh.
(sighs) (indistinct chatter) (cabin alert dings) (plane engines powering up) (cabin alert dings) >> Across the world, so many people are fleeing their countries.
Some are fleeing war.
Some are fleeing poverty.
They all have something in common, which is looking for somewhere safe to live.
>> I am a refugee.
I just look like you.
I've got a family, I've got dreams, I've got hopes, I've got a home.
You know, I've got everything, literally nothing different from you people.
I just want a peaceful life away from violence.
Hey!
>> Anyone can become a refugee, anyone.
It's not something which you choose, it's something that happens to you.
And just like it happened to me, it could happen to you.
(birds chirping) I was one of the 1.1 million people who crossed into Europe in 2015.
I am Hassan, Hassan from Syria.
>> Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the United Kingdom.
The local time is... (announcement fades away) >> Go to pbs.org/frontline for more on how the migrant crisis grew and worsened over time.
>> Oh, my God.
>> Read an interview with filmmaker James Bluemel about the making of "Exodus."
Explore Frontline's archive of reporting on the crisis and what fueled it.
Connect to the Frontline community on Facebook and Twitter, and if stories like this matter to you, then sign up for our newsletter at pbs.org/frontline.
>> The 45th president.
>> The way the game got played in his household was, if you did not win, you lost.
>> The moments that shaped him.
>> His lawyer taught Donald how to come out punching.
>> The battles he's fought.
>> As quickly as the banks loved him, that's as quick as they saw him as a pariah.
>> And the battle he won.
>> Donald Trump was somehow finding a way to connect with the people who mattered at that moment.
>> For more on this and other Frontline programs, visit our website at pbs.org/frontline.
Frontline's "Exodus" is available on DVD.
To order, visit shopPBS.org or call 1-800-PLAY-PBS.
Frontline is also available for download on iTunes.
Inside a Sinking Dinghy Crossing the Mediterranean Sea
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S2016 Ep15 | 6m 46s | A harrowing scene from "Exodus." (6m 46s)
Video has Closed Captions
Preview: S2016 Ep15 | 31s | The first-person stories of refugees and migrants fleeing war and persecution for Europe. (31s)
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