Syria medical student wants to serve as doctor in Turkiye to show his gratitude

A Syrian medical student wants to serve as a doctor in Turkiye to show his gratitude to the country for welcoming his family, who was seeking refuge after the Syrian war erupted, Anadolu News Agency reports

Syria medical student wants to serve as doctor in Turkiye to show his gratitude

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Emin Bereket, 21, told Anadolu Agency that he fled Syria with his family after forces of the Bashar Al-Assad regime besieged Aleppo in 2014.

Bereket, who achieved a high score in the Foreign Student Exam (YOS) in Turkiye, started studying at the Faculty of Medicine at Istanbul Medeniyet University, where he is now a second-year student.

"As a refugee, being a doctor is very important. You came out of the war as a child and suffered traumas. Despite this, you strive and succeed," he said.

"Turkiye was the only country that opened its doors to us. It did not separate us from its own citizens. It allowed me to study and receive an education in very good conditions here."

On the increasing anti-refugee rhetoric around the world, Bereket quoted Albert Einstein, who was also a refugee, as saying: "A bundle of belongings isn't the only thing a refugee brings to his new country."

"A refugee can add a lot to the country … We can pay our debt to Turkiye in a good way," he added.

Syria has been locked in a vicious civil war since early 2011, when the Assad regime cracked down on pro-democracy protests.

Over 14 million people had to flee their homes, becoming refugees or internally displaced, according to the European Union.

More than 3.7 million Syrians currently reside in Turkiye, making it the world's top refugee-hosting country. Following the start of a bloody civil war in Syria, Turkiye adopted an "open-door" policy for Syrians fleeing persecution and brutality.

Source: Middle East Monitor under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

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