(LETHBRIDGE, ALBERTA) A Syrian refugee family living in southern Alberta broke into tears, laughter, and long, silent hugs as they reunited with their eldest daughter and her children at Calgary airport on November 18, 2025, ending nearly a decade of forced separation across three countries.
The Muhammad family, who settled in Lethbridge, Alberta, in 2016 after fleeing war in Syria and spending several years in Jordan, had waited since 2012 to see this moment, which one sibling quietly called “the best day of my life” as he watched his sister walk through the arrivals gate.

A painful chapter finally closed
For the parents and five children who first arrived in Canada as government-assisted refugees, the reunion closed a painful chapter that began when bombs and gunfire forced them from their home in Syria more than a decade ago.
Speaking through tears in the arrivals hall, the mother said she wished her husband, who died in Alberta before he could see his eldest daughter reach safety, had lived long enough to witness the family together again.
“This is what he prayed for every night,” she said in Arabic, as relatives translated. “He wanted all his children to be safe in Canada. Today I feel happy and sad at the same time.”
The daughter, who had remained in Jordan with her husband and young children when her parents’ resettlement case moved forward, had not seen her younger siblings since they were teenagers. Now adults building their own lives in Lethbridge, the brothers and sisters rushed past other travelers at Calgary airport to surround her in a tight circle of embraces that seemed to erase, at least for a moment, the years spent apart.
Preparing a home to welcome them
One brother, who recently bought a modest home in Lethbridge and spent months renovating the basement, had installed extra walls, flooring, and beds so the new arrivals would have a private space of their own.
He said creating a place where the extended Syrian refugee family could live together felt like the best way to honour their late father’s wish and to repay Canada for giving them a new start.
“We came with nothing,” he said. “Canada helped us. Now my sister is here, my nieces and nephews are here. I just want them to feel safe from the first night.”
The limits and promise of reunification
The family’s journey shows both the promise and the limits of Canada’s refugee and family reunification system. The Muhammads fled Syria in 2012 as the conflict spread, joining millions of other Syrians in neighboring Jordan.
Four years later, they were among the thousands selected for resettlement in Canada as part of the federal program that has brought more than 100,000 Syrian refugees to the country since 2015, according to government figures.
But while most of the family boarded flights to Canada in 2016, the eldest daughter’s case stalled. Complex paperwork, changing priorities, and limited resettlement spots left her waiting in Jordan with her children as years passed.
Her parents in Alberta filed new applications, sought help from community groups, and kept every phone close by in case of a call from officials, but progress came slowly.
Advocates say stories like this are common among Syrian families split across several countries. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, many refugees who reached Canada quickly through large government programs later spent years trying to reunite with spouses, children, or parents stuck in unsafe conditions abroad.
Under Canada’s immigration rules, refugees who become permanent residents can sponsor close family members, but the process is often slow and can be delayed by:
- security checks
- missing documents
- limited resettlement spots
- events and instability in the home region
The federal immigration department, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, says it aims to reunite families as fast as possible, and it provides information on refugee sponsorship and family reunification on its official website at Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.
The human cost of waiting
For the Muhammads, each month of waiting felt heavier as their father’s health declined. Family members say he spoke constantly of the daughter left behind, counting grandchildren he had never held, worrying about their safety, and asking relatives to keep pushing Canadian officials. He died still hoping to greet them in Lethbridge one day.
When approval finally came, the news spread quickly through the tight-knit Syrian community in Lethbridge. Friends organized rides to Calgary airport, volunteers gathered winter clothing for the newcomers, and local sponsors prepared to help the family with school registrations and language classes once they arrived.
At the airport, small Canadian flags and homemade signs filled with Arabic and English greeted the arriving children, who clung to their mother as they scanned the crowd for familiar faces. Airport staff, used to business travelers hurrying through the terminal, paused to watch as the Syrian refugee family formed a large circle, everyone talking at once, phones held high to record the long-awaited scene.
Broader context: displacement continues
The reunion unfolded against a wider backdrop of ongoing conflict and displacement. Even as Canada and other countries have opened doors to many Syrians, human rights groups say millions remain in unstable situations — including camps and crowded cities across the Middle East — with limited access to work, education, and medical care.
For the Muhammads, the moment at Calgary airport did not erase those realities, but it offered a measure of safety and stability for one more branch of their family.
Next steps for the family
Over the coming weeks, the new arrivals will:
- Apply for provincial health cards
- Enroll the children in school
- Begin English classes in Lethbridge
They will be supported by relatives who still remember their own first winter in Canada and the shock of seeing snow for the first time.
Community impact and hopes for policy change
Community members say the family’s story is already inspiring others who remain separated from loved ones overseas. Some hope the attention on this Syrian refugee family will encourage:
- faster processing for other reunification cases
- greater recognition in Ottawa that each file represents a real family
- increased support from local communities and sponsors
“Behind every file number there is a parent, a child, or a grandparent waiting for a phone call.”
Back in Lethbridge, the renovated basement is now filled with suitcases, children’s laughter, and the smell of Syrian coffee — a small, warm sign of life resettled and family finally together.
The Muhammad family reunited at Calgary airport on November 18, 2025, after fleeing Syria in 2012 and resettling in Canada in 2016. The eldest daughter and her children remained in Jordan until complex paperwork and limited resettlement capacity delayed their arrival. Community sponsors in Lethbridge prepared housing, clothing, and support for school and language classes. The reunion underscores successes in Canada’s refugee resettlement while highlighting ongoing delays in family reunification processes.
