Fleeing Syria to Egypt
Yasmine, Kamar’s 16-year-old daughter, brings vegetables to the catering business.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
Kamar prepares chickens for roasting. She is part of Lady of Damascus, a catering business in Alexandria, Egypt, started by Syrian refugee women.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
Ghazwa, a co-founder of the group, buys containers and other supplies from a street vendor.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
Ghazwa pours out a pot of vegetables for an order for 300 people.
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Ghazwa goes over invoices. She is a taskmaster but also has a droll sense of humor.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
Ghazwa speaks to a supplier. She often worries about the catering business. Can it stay afloat, given each day’s slender profits?
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
The women make mini-pizzas.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
Mona kneads dough to make the mini-pizzas. “We’ll go home to Syria one day,” she says of her family.
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The women of Lady of Damascus, with two of their children.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
Some of the group’s signature dishes.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)
Kamar brings out the chickens. Her family of five owned two homes in Syria but now lives in a cramped apartment not far from the catering kitchen.
(Sima Diab / For The Times)