Two Syrian refugee sisters living in Georgia, USA, cooked an assortment of Middle Eastern dishes to welcome a group of 40 people affected by Hurricane Irma.

Abeer and Nora al-Sheikh Bakri, who fled their hometown of Douma in 2012 before resettling in Georgia in 2016, told Huffpost that they know what it’s like to lose everything, and thus felt "compelled" to help.

They drove for an hour to deliver the food to the Hamzah Islamic Center in Alpharetta, Georgia, where dozens of evacuees had taken refuge from the storm, the Huffpost reported.

The sisters refused to receive any compensation for their efforts, saying that they had lived through displacement themselves and didn't want the evacuees to “feel uprooted” in the same way.

“We are the same as Americans. We don’t wish ill on anyone. This is within our nature as Syrians. This is what our religion tells us to do,” Nora told the website.

Hurricane Irma displaced more than half a million people in a devastating storm which hit the southeast of the country.

“I called my sister Nora and we got cooking,” Abeer, 28, told HuffPost. “We were uprooted from war. We know the feeling of leaving everything behind.”

There are more than five million Syrian refugees, and 6.5 million displaced internally, together accounting for half of the entire population, figures from the UN show.

What happens when the tables of vulnerability are turned? You never know when you'll need them instead. Beautiful... https://t.co/TllfUFQKYc — Dr. Omar Suleiman (@omarsuleiman504) September 12, 2017

The two sisters have set up their own catering business Sweet & Savoury, which has attracted more great compliments since their show of generosity.

Hurricane Irma has killed more than 60 people so far with destruction widespread throughout Florida and nearby states.

It has been categorised as one of the most powerful Atlantic storms on record.

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition.