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Syrian refugee family gets settled in Indianapolis

Posted at 5:43 AM, Sep 14, 2016
and last updated 2016-09-14 15:48:25-04

INDIANAPOLIS -- Muhammad, the father of a Syrian refugee family, studies a dictionary after work, determined to learn English as fast as possible.

His wife, Sanaa, reads books to their two daughters.

They've been in Indiana for just two months. 

Their favorite thing about the United States so far? 

Safety.

"We had to leave because the area was under siege," Sanaa said, with the help of a translator. "There was killing, bombing, no electricity, no water, no food, nothing there."

MORE | Indiana sees Syrian refugee stream since Pence order blocked

In 2014, Muhammad and Sanaa worked as teachers in Damascus. They didn't want to reveal their last name for fear that it might jeopardize their family still in Syria.

They say living among volatility was a way of life. 

Hoping to escape the dangerous conditions, the family of four headed to the Lebanon border.

They say they passed through 200 checkpoints along the way.

"At each checkpoint they can stop you," Muhammad said. "They can take you to jail. They can make mistakes at each checkpoint -- you are so scared. 'Are they going to stop me now? Are they going to take me now?'"

READ | Indiana students beg Pence to let in refugees: 'One man can change the world. You can be that man.'

Like many new to Indiana, they say they're taken aback by Hoosier Hospitality. 

Muhammad has paid it forward by volunteering with other Syrian refugees to make meals for the area's homeless. 

Their wish is that federal judges and state leaders will see them as a family, not as a threat.

On Tuesday, a federal appeals court listened to Indiana's case over refugees in the state. It's not clear when the court will rule.

The state attorney general's office is appealing a ruling by a federal judge that blocks Ind. Gov. Mike Pence from suspending the placement of refugees in Indiana.

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Pence says Indiana should stop the Syrian refugee program until the federal government can prove that participants aren't tied to terrorism.  

"We are refugees, but we are not scary people," Sanaa said. "We are human, like others. We ran away for our lives and for safety."