It has taken them through three years eking out a living in Turkey as Syria's war killed hundreds of thousands and turned their old street into piles of shattered stone.

And last week, just when they thought they were finally safe, it left them trapped in Istanbul after one of the Trump administration's most contentious decisions to date.

Their bags had been packed for a flight when the White House announced on Jan. 27 a ban on Syrian refugees entering the United States. “At first I thought it was a joke, that she was joking with me,” said Mahmoud Khoja, 58, remembering the phone call telling them their flights had been canceled. “I just froze.”

Tuesday night, after a week in which courts have suspended the bans over questions of their legality, Khoja and his family arrived in New York as another court was deciding whether President Trump's ban should be reinstated.

AD

AD

Amid the largest refugee crisis since World War II, families like the Khojas represent just the tiniest fraction of a human exodus encompassing the rich and poor of every faith. And despite the political debates in the United States and Europe, most Syrian refugees will never leave the Middle East.

After almost six years of war, Turkey is hosting at least 2.8 million refugees. In Lebanon, at least a million. Fewer than 17,000 reside in the United States.

Families approved for resettlement in the United States have undergone up to two years of security vetting by multiple international and government agencies. They have also been identified as those in the greatest need and priority is given for victims of torture, women at risk of abuse, and families in need of serious medical and psychological treatment.

AD

AD

In our reporting from the Middle East, we have covered some of the reasons Syrians are fleeing. In Aleppo, it was one of the bloodiest battles of the war. In the cities of Raqqa and Deir al-Zour, it is the iron-fist of the Islamic State. And across areas held by the Syrian government, it is sheer terror at the torture on might face in jail.

With the federal appeals court's decision looming, another family thousands of miles away in Cairo will be waiting to learn if their own flight to Chicago will go ahead this time.

Speaking from his barren apartment in Cairo's Gesr el Suez neighborhood, Samer El Noury, 37, still refuses to believe that his family can now start a new life in America. Five years after fleeing the Syrian capital, Damascus, their original flight was canceled, and now there is nothing left for them in Cairo. Their furniture has been sold. The summer clothes have been given away.

AD

AD

“If I don't travel tonight, I don't want to go to the United States anymore,” he said. “I'd rather go to some other country.”

And if the family succeeds, have their feelings changed about the United States? “Most American people are kind and are not racist,” he said. “So I am not going to judge the whole country because of one person.”

Sudarsan Raghavan and Heba Farouk Mahfouz in Cairo contributed to this report.