Hara Hotel
Nonfiction The Syrian humanitarian catastrophe HARA HOTEL A Tale of Syrian Refugees in Greece By Teresa Thornhill 354 pp. Verso Reviewed by Tom Glenn Teresa Thornhill, a middle-aged Briton, worked with Syrian refugees at the Hara Hotel in Greece in 2016 for two weeks. Several months later, she went to Austria to meet with one young Syrian Kurd she had helped and to record the story of his clandestine walk through the mountains of Macedonia and his journey on foot through Serbia and Hungary. At the beginning of 2017, she returned briefly to Greece to learn what had happened to the Syrians she had tried to help. These three trips make up the three parts of Hara Hotel , a book that details the misery of the hapless Syrian refugees. Woven through the story is the history of the rebellion against the bloodthirsty regime of Hafez al-Assad and his son, Bashar al-Assad; the rise of Daesh (acronym for the Arabic phrase al-Dawla al-Islamiya al-Iraq al-Sham , that is, the Islamic State of Iraq an...