Photos: What Syrian refugees carry in their bags as they leave their lives behind


When Syrian refugees flee their war-torn country, they can bring only a small selection of belongings with them. Large suitcases won’t fit on the tiny boats that are overloaded with people, and so asylum-seekers travel with the few possessions they need the most.
But of course, what a person needs the most varies hugely. And many refugees lose or have to shed items during the dangerous and arduous journey.
The International Rescue Committee has released these poignant photographs of the contents of refugees’ bags, which offer a glimpse of them as individuals. Taken as a whole, the images also paint a heartbreaking picture of what people cling to—and let go of—as they leap into the unknown.
A child
Omran, a 6-year-old from Damascus, Syria, brought sweets in his colorful rucksack, as well as a toothbrush and a syringe for emergencies.

One pair of pants, one shirt

A teenager
Iqbal, a 17-year-old from Kunduz, Afghanistan, said he picked out items that would help him fit in.
“I want my skin to be white and hair to be spiked,” he told the IRC. “I don’t want them to know I’m a refugee. I think that someone will spot me and call the police because I’m illegal.”

One pair of pants, one shirt, one pair of shoes, and one pair of socks

An artist
Nour, a 20-year-old artist from Syria, packed two bags but was told by smugglers that he could only take one. He left behind his clothes to keep his bag of items with personal meaning.

Small bag of personal documents

A mother
Aboessa, who is 20 years old and from Syria, has been travelling with her 10-month-old daughter, Doua. They were in a rubber raft when Turkish police detached the boat’s motor, and they had to use makeshift paddles to make it to shore.
Hat for the baby

A pharmacist
This 34-year-old father lived and practiced medicine in Germany for eight years, and so he escaped the war in Syria to travel to Europe.
He travelled in a dinghy with 53 others and almost made it to Greece, until a coast guard started yelling for them to stop and the boat was punctured. He treaded water for 45 minutes before he was rescued.
Money (wrapped to protect it from water)

A family
One family of 31 people (seven women, four men and 20 children) lost all their belongings on their journey from Aleppo, Syria, to Greece. They saved just one bag.

One shirt, one pair of jeans,
