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Twitter helps ex-child refugee find kindhearted aid worker who gave her a bike when she was aged 5

Mevan Babakar's tweet went viral - and within 36 hours the pair were reunited after 25 years...

A woman has tracked down a kindhearted aid worker who gifted her a bicycle when she was a five-year-old child living in a refugee shelter in the Netherlands.

The woman, named Mevan Babakar, posted a picture of the man on Twitter on Mondayy, together with a message that read: “Hi internet, this is a longshot BUT I was a refugee for 5 yrs in the 90s and this man, who worked at a refugee camp near Zwolle in the Netherlands, out of the kindness of his own heart bought me a bike.

“My five year old heart exploded with joy. I just want to know his name. Help?”

 

The post went viral, receiving 22,500 likes and nearly 7,500 retweets, as well as almost 350 replies.

BBC News reports that Ms Babakar’s family is Kurdish and fled Iraq during the first Gulf War, passing through Turkey, Azerbaijan and Russia before reaching the camp in the Netherlands, where they spent a year.

They subsequently settled in London, where she works as a tech manager, and she had taken a break to revisit her journey as a child refugee and was in Zwolle carrying out research.

Yesterday, Ms Babakar, now aged 29, tweeted, “WE FOUND HIM!!” and that contact had been made with the man’s family.

She continued: “Not only did I find him, but I've also had other refugees reach out to me and tell me that him and his wife helped them too! Their kindness has touched so many lives. One woman said ‘they weren't friends to me, they were family’.

“Someone else who worked at the camp got in touch, Sandra, she was incredible too, she helped me use a computer for the first time! I now work in tech! More so than anything I remember these small kindnesses growing up, they helped shape me.

Yesterday evening, less than 36 hours after her initial tweet, the pair met in person at the home in Germany of the aid worker, who is named Egbert.

 

 

"He thought the bike was too small a gesture to make such a big fuss about but he's really glad that it was the key to bringing us together again," she wrote.

She added: “Small actions can have big consequences. The kindness that Egbert and his family showed me will stay with me for a lifetime, and it continues to shape me as a person. That's the magical thing about kindness, it doesn't cost anything and it changes the world one person at a time.”

They say you never forget your first bicycle – nor, in this case, the person who gave it to you.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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2 comments

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RobD | 5 years ago
0 likes

More of this please!

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burtthebike | 5 years ago
9 likes

OK, only peripherally about cycling, but a lovely story in these dark times.  Thank you.

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