Adnan R. Khan: It’s been four years since three-year-old Alan Kurdi died. Since then, borders have slammed shut and promises have been broken.
On the two-year anniversary of Alan Kurdi’s death, Abdullah and Tima Kurdi discuss his legacy and their hopes for the future.
At least 8,500 have drowned since a photograph of a dead boy on the beach moved the world. Many more have disappeared into Syria’s gulag. We will all be judged.
The photo of Alan Kurdi, face-down on a beach, was seen as a wake-up call. But two years later, the crisis persists—for refugees, and for the Kurdis
On the anniversary of the little boy’s death, Alan Kurdi’s family laments how little has changed in Syria.
We all have every right to be angry. It’s what Syrians need from all of us right now.
An injured little boy is a metaphor for the collapse of humanity in a ceaseless war in Syria we’d rather not even think about
The heartbreaking image of three-year-old Alan Kurdi became the face of a wrenching global refugee crisis
Of symbols, Syrians, and defining images: Anne Kingston explains how the iconography of a moment says more about the viewers than the subjects
The latest stats reinforce the daunting task facing the Liberals, who vow to keep their promise and resettle 25,000 more refugees by year’s end
The photograph of Alan Kurdi, dead on a beach, moved the world. Now, his father has become a pawn in the region’s intractable conflicts. It’s tearing him apart.
One family’s desperate flight and the final hours of the little boy who changed everything.