Stories of Change


Maysam* in his new home in Jakarta. Photo: CWS


CWS supports about 500 refugees and asylum seekers in Jakarta.

With CWS support, hope in the midst of sadness

Sixteen-year-old Maysam is among the 35 teenage boys living in a new CWS-supported group home for unaccompanied and separated refugee children in Jakarta, Indonesia. Originally from a small town in Ghazni Province in southeastern Afghanistan, Maysam fled his home after a Taliban-affiliated group abducted his father, who was a shopkeeper.

“We had a good life. But one day, for a reason my family and I never understood, somebody put a bottle of wine in my father’s car; and, when men from the Taliban group found it, they accused my father of selling alcohol. They took him away and I haven’t heard from him since,” Maysam recalls.

Soon after the abduction, Maysam received a letter from someone claiming Taliban affiliation telling him to come to a meeting. Fearing for Maysam’s life, his grandfather decided to send him away in search of safety and, maybe, a better future.

Arriving alone in Indonesia by way of an established escape route to Malaysia, Maysam first lived Bogor, a town near Jakarta. After a year, financial support he had been receiving from his uncle stopped and Maysam found himself alone … and homeless.

“I was really alone and didn’t know what to do. I was afraid; I had no food and no friends. Then another refugee told me about UNHCR and how to register there as an asylum seeker,” he says.

Maysam now lives in a new group home that CWS supports in partnership with UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency and U.S. Department of State: Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration. “I have a great feeling being here,” says Maysam. “With CWS support of food and shelter, and with many new friends, even though I am very sad to be separated from my family and homeland, my hope for the future is to be educated and to settle somewhere where I can live in peace.”

*name changed to protect his identity