Taking selfies and bursting into song, 200 Syrian, Iraqi and Kurdish refugees on Saturday visited some of Paris's most popular sights thanks to a non-profit organisation named Secours Populaire.
This summer, they were fleeing war. But this weekend the refugees took smiling photos as they experienced the city of lights and dreamt of a new future in France with the help of the organisation that has in the past worked with Spanish Republican exiles and people fleeing Nazi Germany.
Nour Shekhany, a 22-year-old who was studying economics in Damascus before fleeing Syria, said he wanted to see "the bridge that collapsed from all of the love padlocks" -- or the famous Pont des Arts.
Currently living in Cergy, northwest of Paris, they are some of the migrants welcomed by France to help neighbouring Germany with its influx of asylum seekers.
"I never imagined being here," said Ali Merkath, 33, who came with his wife and two children.
"Baghdad, that's done. Now, my country is France, this is where we will build our future."
But for some refugees, the moment is bittersweet.
Aboud Omar from Syria's devastated Aleppo left his wife and six children -- one of whom is just a newborn -- at a refugee camp in Turkey.
"I ask God and the French government to bring my family here as soon as possible," said Omar, 37.
Taking selfies and bursting into song, 200 Syrian, Iraqi and Kurdish refugees on Saturday visited some of Paris’s most popular sights thanks to a non-profit organisation named Secours Populaire.
This summer, they were fleeing war. But this weekend the refugees took smiling photos as they experienced the city of lights and dreamt of a new future in France with the help of the organisation that has in the past worked with Spanish Republican exiles and people fleeing Nazi Germany.
Nour Shekhany, a 22-year-old who was studying economics in Damascus before fleeing Syria, said he wanted to see “the bridge that collapsed from all of the love padlocks” — or the famous Pont des Arts.
Currently living in Cergy, northwest of Paris, they are some of the migrants welcomed by France to help neighbouring Germany with its influx of asylum seekers.
“I never imagined being here,” said Ali Merkath, 33, who came with his wife and two children.
“Baghdad, that’s done. Now, my country is France, this is where we will build our future.”
But for some refugees, the moment is bittersweet.
Aboud Omar from Syria’s devastated Aleppo left his wife and six children — one of whom is just a newborn — at a refugee camp in Turkey.
“I ask God and the French government to bring my family here as soon as possible,” said Omar, 37.