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When my husband left me, I headed for the kitchen – here s how comfort food can save the soul | Food

Bee Wilson was bereft when her marriage suddenly ended after 22 years. But solace came from meatballs, eggy bread and her most beloved meals. She talks to four other people who pieced themselves back together with food

Cambridge couple calls for residents to reach out and help Afghan refugees

Cambridge couple calls for residents to reach out and help Afghan refugees
cambridge-news.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cambridge-news.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

From Syrian refugee to Cambridge business owner in 3 years | Anglia

play-icon Watch our report from Hannah Pettifer Three years ago Faraj Alnasser fled war torn Aleppo in Syria and took refuge with a Jewish family in Cambridge. He had to learn to speak English but now he has turned his life around and is running his own food business in the city which first welcomed him into the UK. ITV News Anglia first filmed Faraj in 2018, then he had just arrived from Syria and was taken in by the Goldhills family. Faraj was taken in by the Goldhills family in 2018 Credit: ITV Anglia They d seen the devastation caused by the Syrian war and wanted to help. Even when he first arrived he found himself at home in the kitchen.

Syrian refugee who fled war and risked his life to cross Channel sets up kitchen in Cambridge

Syrian refugee who fled war and risked his life to cross Channel sets up kitchen in Cambridge Faraj survived a gruelling journey through several countries across Europe before finding a home here and even launching his own business Updated Faraj Alnasser is now a trained chef with his own business in Cambridge (Image: Faraj Alnasser) Sign up to our newsletter for daily updates and breaking newsInvalid EmailSomething went wrong, please try again later. Sign up here! When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Your information will be used in accordance with ourPrivacy Notice.

Silenced women find their voice in Layla Al Ammar s latest novel

SHARE Novels are born in different ways. Some lucky writers have eureka moments and magic-up original concepts and bold outlines. Others are forced to sift and sort hazy thoughts and germs of ideas, shaping them over time into something resembling a narrative. For author Layla Al Ammar, the issues that form the background to her second novel had been incubating in her mind for years, but only as hard facts. “These were issues that I’d been deeply absorbed in from early 2011,” she says, “and I had followed their developments closely – from the Arab uprisings across the region, the civil war in Syria, the refugee crisis, and the rise of the alt-right and nationalist rhetoric around the world. I had done all of this without consciously thinking that I would put it into a novel.”

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