TOP STORY: ‘Dream, Dream, Dream’: Syrian Family Finds Safety in Education From Home in Lyme

The Hamou family celebrates the graduation of Kamber Hamou from the University of Connecticut in May. From left to right: Mohamad, Yaldiz, Kamber, Darin and Hani Hamou. Photo courtesy of the family.

LYME, CT–Nine years ago, Syrian refugees Hani and Yaldiz Hamou arrived in Lyme after chasing an education for their three children from war-torn Aleppo to the cold, unwelcoming streets of Turkey.

This spring, Kamber Hamou, 25, became the first member of the family to earn a college diploma. His degree in computer science from the University of Connecticut led immediately to a full-time job in the digital department at Pfizer Inc.  

“Dream, dream, dream,” Hani said in his slightly broken English in a July interview from the family’s living room overlooking the fields and silos of Tiffany Farm. “You need dream. Everybody needs to have dream.”

Hani called it “chance” when an application and multiple interviews with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees program landed the family in the United States. 

But Lyme-Old Lyme Schools and the state university system have proven to be the family’s winning ticket, according to Hani. 

“This is my big lotto,” he said. 

Hani, a US citizen with his wife and three children since 2021, acknowledged the importance of material things in his new country. But for the father who arrived with nothing but his family, the priorities are different. 

“Everybody like money, like car,” Hani said. “No, I like to see my children’s graduation. Everybody safe for future. Safe.” 

He recalled flying from Istanbul to New York City in 2016. The family was soon greeted by members of the New Haven-based Integrated Refugee and Immigration Services (IRIS) and the Old Lyme Refugee Resettlement Committee.

“No English, no job, no anything,” he said. “Now, I have three children in college.”

Eldest daughter Darin, 26, is a certified nursing assistant at the Essex Meadows senior living facility who this fall will begin studying to become a registered nurse at Three Rivers Community College in Norwich. Mohamad, 20, is pursuing a business management degree at UCONN.

Importance of Education

Kamber said forging a life in a new country was challenging. But he gave credit to his family – the one he came over with as well as the people who became honorary members of the Hamou clan – for making it possible for him to succeed. 

“I mean, it’s really not easy, but still, you do get through it,” he said. “You know that tomorrow is going to be different. And working hard pays off, always.” 

Hani is employed as a custodian at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School while Yaldiz holds a position in the laundry room at the same senior living facility where her daughter works. 

Hani, one of six children born to an illiterate mother and a father who worked all the time, traced his unmet need for higher education back to his childhood.

“Nobody care about my dream,” he said of his roots in Syria. “I’m coming here, I promise myself: My children need to go to college. This is number one for me.”

For Darin, it was the family’s long waking hours after fleeing bombings in Aleppo, Syria, that made her brother’s graduation all the more powerful. 

She recalled flashing back during the ceremony to the winter nights spent as refugees in Turkey. That’s when Kamber, then 12-years-old, would fall asleep in clothes soaking wet from his dishwashing job while she cried into a pillow after her own 16-hour shifts at a garment factory. 

“There was a lot of nights that we didn’t have money to buy a small bread to eat,” she said. 

Back then, the children were not allowed an education in Turkey due to their refugee status. Yaldiz, speaking in translation through Kamber, remembered the tears she’d shed when she watched her children walking to work while others the same age passed by on their way to school. 

Hani pointed out that Mohamad only went to school in Syria for one year before the war broke out. But that didn’t stop the pre-teen from learning enough during his inaugural summer in the United States to enter school as a fifth grader.

“I cry,” Hani said of taking his youngest child to Lyme Consolidated School for the first time. “Mohamad (had) just one year in school, just one year. Now, Mohamad in college.”

Bombs Everywhere

Hani and Yaldiz Hamou returned to Syria for the first time earlier this summer. Their trip included a visit to the Aleppo Citadel. Photo submitted.

Hani said the civil war in Syria had been going on for a few years when fighting came to their hometown of Aleppo. The family escaped one night after missiles began to fly. 

Kamber remembered the chaos. 

“There was bombs everywhere, like, literally. People crying on the streets. People calling for help,” he said. 

There was no question they needed to get out, according to Hani. 

“It’s not safe. It’s not safe,” he said. “It’s not safe for my family.” 

The Hamous retreated to northern Syria before fleeing to Turkey. It was there, during two years and six months that felt to the children like forever, that a friend told them about the United Nations program for refugees. 

Hani said he didn’t know what the United Nations was, but that didn’t matter. His friend told him to fill out an application anyway.

“Go,” he recalled the man saying. “Go sign. It’s just paper.”

Hani was 43-years-old when that plane out of Istanbul – it was his first flight ever – took the family to their new home.

Yaldiz remembered the fear.

“Who’s going to take us?” she said. “Who’s going to take care of us?”

‘Missed Opportunity’

The same resettlement process that welcomed the Hamous has helped families from The Congo, Puerto Rico, Iraq and Afghanistan build a foundation in Lyme and Old Lyme since the Old Lyme Resettlement Committee began eight years ago as a tri-church initiative in partnership with IRIS. 

Kamber cited a community of supporters that included the volunteers who brought the family to countless medical appointments and soccer games. It also included the first teacher to introduce him and Darin to the English language and to fractions.

The Hamou children now refer to two of those volunteers as grandmothers. The same teacher attended Kamber’s graduation as an honored guest.

“I had that dream in me,” Kamber said. “I knew that I would graduate. The amount of support I got is what I did not expect.”

But the volunteer committee disbanded earlier this year, according to a former member. The news came after an executive order from President Donald Trump suspended the nation’s refugee admissions program — a move that, according to the CT Mirror, led IRIS to shutter its main office space in New Haven and reduce its 100-person staff by half.

Affected refugees along with nonprofit aid groups continue to fight the move in federal court. 

Kamber described the suspension as a “missed opportunity” for the country to make a difference in the lives of refugees, and for refugees to make a difference in the United States. 

“I always promise myself that I’m going to give back to this community, even if I move out of the town,” he said. “I’m gonna be still connected. I’m gonna help when help is needed. And I’m gonna do my best to be remembered here.” 

The Hamous said they are not unique. 

“There are a lot of people, a lot of people, who are like us,” Kamber said. “So, I just feel like it’s going to be really hard on both sides: A missed opportunity for the United States itself to lose these people, and these people to lose their dreams.”

Hani, asked about his own plans for the future, said it doesn’t matter.

“Maybe I live here,” he said. “Maybe I’m going, after I’m retired, back to my country. Small house, me and my wife. I don’t know.”

The most important thing is his children, and the guarantees that only education can make against an uncertain future.

“Tomorrow you don’t know,” he said. “War coming, war happening. Nobody knows.”

South Lyme Union Chapel Celebrates 125 Years Sunday

The South Lyme Union Chapel on Mile Creek Rd. celebrates its 125th anniversary on Sunday.

OLD LYME—The South Lyme Union Chapel will hold a 125th anniversary celebration this Sunday, Aug. 10. All are welcome.

Visitors to the chapel at 308 Mile Creek Road are invited to enjoy hot dogs, salads, dessert and beverages from noon to 2 p.m. There will be opportunities to learn about the area as it existed when the chapel was dedicated in 1900, and for kids to participate in a rock painting activity. 

The event is free, but donations will be accepted.

For more information, call 860-434-1200. 

South Lyme Union Chapel Celebrates 125 Years

The South Lyme Union Chapel on Mile Creek Rd. celebrates its 125th anniversary on Sunday.

OLD LYME—The South Lyme Union Chapel will hold a 125th anniversary celebration this Sunday, Aug. 10. All are welcome.

Visitors to the chapel at 308 Mile Creek Road are invited to enjoy hot dogs, salads, dessert and beverages from noon to 2 p.m. There will be opportunities to learn about the area as it existed when the chapel was dedicated in 1900, and for kids to participate in a rock painting activity. 

The event is free, but donations will be accepted.

For more information, call 860-434-1200. 

Three New Shows on View at Lyme Art Association

Prague Morning Light ‘(oil, 33×27, $7,900) is one of the signature paintings in the 104th Elected Artist Show on view at the Lyme Art Association.

OLD LYME — On Saturday, Aug. 2, from 5 to 7 pm., an Opening Reception and awards presentation will be held for the104th Elected Artist Show and a new show titled, Red Hot. All are welcome and there is no charge for admission.

The Lyme Art Association’s Elected Artists are torch-bearers for the American representational tradition. They follow in the footsteps of the Lyme Art Colony artists who hung their Tonalist and Impressionist works on the walls of the Old Lyme library in 1902 before building their own gallery where the LAA now has its home today.

The LAA once again showcases the very best work of this accomplished group.

‘Desert Bloom’ by Liz Monahan is one of the signature paintings of the Red Hot show currently on view at Lyme Art Association.

Red Hot celebrates the power, passion, and moving nature of the color red. Long associated with love, intense emotion, heat, and revolution, the color red holds an emotional and cultural charge that artists have used to command attention and make bold statements.  Whether used subtly or in full saturation, this exhibition invited artists to explore the many shades of red and to embrace the color red as a central element of expression.

Our guest exhibition is the New Haven Paint & Clay Club Select Members Exhibit. A juror selected five of its members, who exhibited in the New Haven Paint & Clay Club’s 2024 Members Exhibit to participate in the show.

The artists chosen for this year’s Select Members Show are Aspasia Anos, Jill Abele Butcher, William Butcher, Frank Bruckmann and Heidi Harrington.

The 104th Elected Artist Show and Red Hot are on view through September 11.

The New Haven Paint & Clay Club Select Members Exhibit is on view July 25 – August 16.

Founded in 1914 by the American Impressionists, the Lyme Art Association continues the tradition of exhibiting and selling representational artwork by its members and invited artists, as well as offering art instruction, lectures, and other public programs to the community.

The LAA is located at 90 Lyme St. in Old Lyme, CT, in a building designed by Lyme colony artist and architect, Charles Adams Platt, and located within the national historic district. Admission is free with contributions appreciated. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 10 to 5 p.m., or by appointment.

For more information on exhibits, purchase of art, art classes, or becoming a member, visit the LAA website at www.lymeartassociation.org or call (860) 434-7802.

I-Park Hosts Open Trails & Music Aug. 9

An I-Park visitor explores Vision on the Pond by sculptor Foon Sham. Photo courtesy of Christina Goldberg for I-Park.

EAST HADDAM—On Saturday, Aug. 9, I-Park, the artists-in-residence program nestled in the woods, invites the public to engage with international artists, wander over the expansive system of trails with environmental art installations and enjoy live music.

I-Park’s Open Trails & Music event takes place from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Visitors will receive a trail map of more than 40 environmental art installations integrated into I-Park’s meadows, woodlands and waterways.

Most trails are gentle and well-marked, allowing for a relaxed, self-paced visit that can last as little as 45 minutes or stretch into several hours. Guests are welcome to bring a picnic basket and unplug in the natural haven.

The Midnight Anthem will take the stage from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 

Known for its soulful sound and genre-blending style, the trio music mixes country, folk, rock, punk, and Americana into a performance that resonates across generations.

Local Honey Acoustic – described as a slightly sweeter spin on the River Valley’s beloved Local Honey Project – will play from 1:30 to 3:30 pm. The duo of Erin Smith and Abe Wilson features acoustic guitar, harmonies and hand percussion.

The family-friendly outdoor event will also include a nature-themed scavenger hunt and an interactive drawing table for children and adults alike.

Advance reservations are recommended, though walk-ins may register at the Welcome Table upon arrival. A $10 per adult is suggested. 

Meet the Artists: 

Jonathan Newman is a talented composer blending classical forms with pop, blues and jazz influences. His dynamic compositions are performed by orchestras and ensembles from around the world. His works are renowned for their emotional accessibility and rhythmic energy.

Sophia Sobers is a visual artist integrating sound and public art in urban and natural spaces. Her practice investigates the intersection of technology and nature, creating immersive environments that invite quiet contemplation.

Emily Gui is an interdisciplinary artist focused on climate, consumerism and ethical tension. Her work spans printmaking, installation and sculpture – often using salvaged materials to underscore the complexities of environmental responsibility.

Alice Miceli is a Brazilian photographer examining landscapes shaped by trauma and environmental degradation. She is internationally recognized for long-term projects that employ experimental photographic techniques to visualize the invisible aftermath of conflict and catastrophe.

Lilliam Rivera is an award-winning author of nine books spanning young adult, middle grade and graphic fiction. Rivera’s stories often center on Latinx identity, girlhood and resilience – and she is celebrated for her ability to blend speculative fiction with deeply grounded emotional truth.

Steven Pestana is a conceptual artist creating immersive environments that challenge perception. His work combines sculpture, performance and digital media to explore themes of uncertainty, belief, and the limits of understanding.

I-Park’s community engagement initiatives this year are supported by grants from the Dominion Energy Charitable Foundation and the Community Foundation of Middlesex County.