After seven months in airport limbo, some good news
It was 2018 when Hassan al-Kontar found himself stranded in a Malaysian airport for seven months, unable to leave for fear of his life.
Five years on, the Syrian refugee, 41, has now become a Canadian citizen.
"Today I became more Canadian, but I considered myself Canadian since the day one," he told the BBC.
Though in many ways joyful, it was also bittersweet, he said, as "it came with ultimate price".
His homeland is in ruins, and he has spent more than a decade away from his loved ones.
Mr al-Kontar's arrival in his adopted hometown of Whistler, in British Columbia (BC) had been preceded by a sojourn that saw him bouncing between countries before becoming stranded at the Kuala Lumpur airport.
He had gone to Malaysia in 2017 from United Arab Emirates, where he had been working since before 2011, but was kicked out after his visa expired.
Unable to return to Syria, where he would have likely been conscripted into the army or imprisoned amidst its civil war, he went to one of the few countries in the world that allows Syrians to enter the country without a visa and stay for 90 days.
When that grace period expired, he tried to enter Ecuador and then Cambodia, but to no avail.
Cambodian officials confiscated his passport and sent him back to Malaysia, leaving him stateless.
No country would let him in, and Mr al-Kontar resigned himself to stay in the airport for the long haul.
Over seven months at Kuala Lumpur International Airport, he began to tweet out video diaries, helping connect his own personal predicament to the broader crisis affecting millions of displaced Syrian refugees. Some 6.8 million people have fled the country since 2011.
The videos propelled him to international fame, and his story garnered the attention of three Canadians who stepped in to help.
The Canadian government allows private groups and individuals to sponsor refugees, by raising funds to cover the first year of their lives in Canada and providing social support.
The BC Muslim Association agreed to sponsor Mr al-Kontar, while the trio of Good Samaritans lobbied the Canadian government and Malaysian officials to let him come to the country. Meanwhile, he spent two months in a Malaysian refugee detention centre, where he said he was interrogated hundreds of times.
Last year, from his home in Canada, he was able to help his family move from Syria - where he said there was no medicine and no food - to Egypt.
But in the 15 years since he has been away, he missed the birth of his niece, and the death of his father in 2016.
"It cost me a father, I was not there to say goodbye to him when he needed me the most. So that is what this day means to me," he said of his naturalisation on Wednesday.
Mr al-Kontar previously told the BBC that, when he landed on Canadian soil, he knew he was home: "The minute I put a foot in Vancouver airport, I felt the difference."
Since then, he has continued to raise awareness for the plight of refugees around the globe, wrote a book about his ordeal, and began working for the Canadian Red Cross. During Covid, he helped with the province's mobile vaccination efforts.
"I think I saw more BC than a lot of Canadians," he said.
He has worked hard to better himself, taking dozens of online courses, and has been promoted to work in flood recovery, he said.
For four years, he was stateless, which made travel basically impossible. Now that he can apply for a Canadian passport, he hopes he can travel to other countries to help other refugees who are displaced.
"As a refugee, we are not only people who are trying, seeking help, powerless, hopeless people," he said. "We are actually trying to find an opportunity to prove ourselves."
(editor-in-charge:Press center5)
Nightclub where footballer Cody Fisher died in a Boxing Day knife assault will close for good after its operating license was removed
Belarus leader: We'll join Russia in war if attacked
Russia's economy shrinks by less than expected
Congressman: 'It was the lowest of low-tech leaks'
Princess of Wales's parents' componenty excellents firm consequentlyld
- Kanye wanted to call his 2018 hit album Ye - HITLER - as anti-Semite rapper's disturbing history of praising Nazi leader is revealed
- Ukrainian post-apocalyptic opera to open festival
- Centres housing Ukrainian refugees set to close
- How secret US files first spread then vanished online
- Man assaulted with a samurai sword at Manhattan subway station
- Russia accused of dropping phosphorus bombs
- Putin: We are not mad, but nuclear risk is rising
- How Ukrainian refugees found their second home
-
Loose Women's Denise Welch has paid tribute to EastEnders actress Josephine Melville (pictured), 61, after she died backstage while performing in a play on Thursday in Nottingham....[in detail]
-
Ukrainian sponsor: Matches and visas take too long
A firm sponsoring a Ukrainian refugee family with a home says the wait for visas is taking too long. ...[in detail]
-
How secret US files first spread then vanished online
How were classified US documents about Ukraine shared online. ...[in detail]
-
Zelensky urges speedy delivery of Western tanks
Ukraine's president says the modern fighting vehicles must be supplied quickly and in significant numbers. ...[in detail]
-
Dutch police said three arrests had been made at a m utilizeum, but provided no details....[in detail]
-
Inside a POW camp for Russians in Ukraine
The BBC is given rare access to a prisoner of war facility housing hundreds in western Ukraine. ...[in detail]
-
School artwork to support Ukrainian children
Pupils at Springfields Academy in Wiltshire have created a giant painting based on love and peace. ...[in detail]
-
'Settling somewhere new is hard - but not impossible'
Olesia fled Ukraine 12 months ago with her children Ros, nine, and Mark, three. ...[in detail]
-
U.S. Customs and Border Protection has released data detailing the numbers of migrants crossing the consequentlyuthern border which are now at the highest level in Decomponentment of Homeland Security history....[in detail]
-
China's war neutrality claim fades with Russia visit
Beijing sees the Kremlin's war as serving a useful geopolitical purpose by confronting US influence. ...[in detail]
- Foxconn: iPhone maker hikes pay ahead of fresh model launch
- IOC urges Ukraine to drop Paris 2024 boycott threat
- Life for a seven-year-old inside a Bakhmut cellar
- How Western tanks can change the Ukraine war
- MP calls for Parliament probe of rate 'rigging' evidence
- Russian sausage tycoon dies in Indian hotel fall
- What US Patriot missiles will mean for Ukraine