Jewish family open their Berlin home to Muslim refugee

An unlikely guest from Syria joins the Jellineks' weekly Shabbat dinner, and now introduces himself as a Berliner.

The Jellinek family is hosting Kinan, a Muslim from Damascus, Syria, in Berlin Mitte.  © UNHCR/Aubrey Wade

BERLIN, Germany – Every Friday evening, the Jellinek family gather for a Shabbat dinner at their home in central Berlin. Chaim, his wife Kyra and three of their four children sit around a candlelit table to recite blessings over wine and good food.

This year, their weekly tradition has included an unlikely guest. Twenty-eight-year-old Kinan, a Syrian Muslim, has been living with the Jellineks since November 2015. He joins them for Shabbat most Fridays and often cooks Syrian meals that he has learned to make by watching videos on YouTube.

Kinan, who prefers to be known only by his first name, used to work in marketing and pharmaceuticals in Damascus. He left Syria in July 2015 to avoid military service because, he said, he did not want to take up arms against his own people.

He went first to Turkey and then Greece. After arriving in Germany in August 2015, he initially stayed in motels and an accommodation centre for asylum-seekers. Then he met Chaim through an organization called Freedomus, co-founded by Chaim, 59, a general practitioner with his own clinic.

The organization publishes an informational handbook and offers some basic services for people seeking asylum, such as accompanying them to the immigration office or helping with translations.

No Stranger Place Berlin

Kinan, 28, a Syrian Muslim, has been living with the Jellineks since November 2015.

The two met just as the Jellineks’ 20-year-old son, Béla, moved out to pursue a career in acting. They offered his room to Kinan.

Kyra, 51, said their family set-up had hardly changed since Kinan moved in. "Everyone does what they feel like doing. Hosting a refugee is a win-win situation. Integration is much easier."

The experience has been smooth so far. Kinan studies German every day. Daughters Rosa, 18, and Lilli, 8, help him with his homework. Kinan's only frustration is that he wishes he was learning the language more quickly so he can start working.

"Integration is not something that we should only ask from people coming into our country. We should ask this of ourselves too."

"Integration is not one-sided work," Chaim said. "Integration is not something that we should only ask from people coming into our country. We should ask this of ourselves too. We must accept different food, different culture, behaviour. It's a process from both sides."

Kinan now introduces himself as a Berliner. He said he loves Germany and believes his fellow Syrians need to look forward more.

"People I meet are always comparing life in Germany to life in Syria. You cannot compare," he said. "If people just forget the past a bit and only look forward, I think integration will be faster and better."


This story is part of a series entitled No Stranger Place, which was developed and photographed by Aubrey Wade in partnership with UNHCR, profiling refugees and their hosts across Europe. One year on from the drowning of three-year-old Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi, thousands of people have come together to bridge cultural divides and language barriers, embracing compassion, hope and humanity – even as some European governments continue to build obstacles. Their generosity is an example to the world.

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