Written by Torin Koos, World Aquatics
Communication Manager
Image Source: Alexander
Hassenstein/Getty Images for IOC
Swimmers Sara and Yusra Mardini
helped light up the red carpet for the star-studded TIME 100 Gala 2023 in New
York City. The sisters were named to the magazine’s 100 Most Influential People
in the World list this year.
Yusra burst onto the international
scene while competing for the IOC Refugee Olympic Team at the Rio 2016 Games
and then again at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
She penned the autobiography
Butterfly: From Refugee to Olympian – My Story of Rescue, Hope and
Triumph. Published in 2018, the book's
storyline chronicled Yusra’s journey from Syria as a war refugee with her
sister to realise her dream of competing at the Olympic Games.
“It’s crazy to think that millions of
people go through that,” Mardini said in an earlier interview with World
Aquatics. “I think about it a lot because I tell my story a lot. I was very,
very lucky to be fine – and my sister, not to lose her.”
After the Olympics, I realised that
it’s not just my story anymore. I realised that my responsibility is to raise
awareness and bring hope to millions of refugees around the world and speak for
all of those who do not have a voice.
By Yusra Mardini
The Mardini sister’s 25-day journey
to freedom – which included swimming for three hours in the open Aegean Ocean
to reach the shores of the Greek island of Lesbos – before charting a new life
through swimming and survival in Germany where they received the right of
residency and resumed their Olympic aspirations was chronicled in the
BAFTA-nominated film “The Swimmers.”
The film drew rave reviews and a
notable audience on Netflix where it peaked as the No.2 watched programme on
Netflix in November 2022.
Australian Cate Blanchett penned the
TIME Magazine piece on Sara and Yusra Mardini's impact and influence. The
Oscar-winning actor and a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador wrote:
In 2015, sisters and competitive
swimmers Yusra and Sara Mardini fled Syria because of conflict. During the
dangerous sea crossing from Turkey to Greece, their dinghy’s engine failed. The
sisters were among those who jumped into the water to guide the overcrowded
boat to safety, saving the lives of all on board.
After seeking asylum in Germany,
Yusra began swimming again and was selected for the first-ever Refugee Olympic
Team. Now a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador, she shares her story with audiences
around the world to demonstrate the determination of refugees to achieve their
dreams despite facing trauma, hardship, and loss.
Sara returned to Greece to volunteer
with a search-and-rescue NGO. There, she was one of 24 aid workers arrested on
charges that were widely criticized by human-rights groups and have since been
dismissed on procedural grounds. An ongoing investigation shines a global
spotlight on the hostility and risks that rescuers can face.
The Swimmers, a 2022 movie inspired
by the sisters’ powerful story, brought to a mass audience the human reality of
what it means to be displaced. That story continues as both Yusra and Sara
fiercely advocate for everyone’s right to seek safety. Whoever. Wherever.
Whenever.
These days, you can find Yusra
studying cinematic arts at the University of Southern California as Sara works
with a non-governmental organisation helping refugees on the Greek island of
Lesbos.
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