
An image of a Syrian father sobbing as he cradled his son and daughter on a Greek beach has been shared by thousands of social media users.
The photograph of Laith Majid, taken by freelancer Daniel Etter at around 4.30am on a beach in Kos, Greece, has provoked a strong reaction to increasingly dehumanised depictions of migrants.
It comes amid news that the number of migrants attempting to reach the safety of Europe has sharply increased, with a record high of 107,000 recorded in August.
Mr Etter, 34, who confesses he has “never been so touched” by one image, managed to find out about the middle-class family from the Syrian city of Deir ez-Zor.
I am overwhelmed by the reaction to this family's tears of relief. This is why I do what I do. http://t.co/guDhQ2w5QU pic.twitter.com/Gu31bKDLMA
— Daniel Etter (@DanielEtterFoto) August 17, 2015
Made me cry, when I saw it yesterday: https://t.co/c4CTeZFd4o
— Katrin Zinoun (@dialogtexte) August 17, 2015
To those who attack 'migrants' online. Look at this man, fleeing war in Syria, cradling his children. And rethink. pic.twitter.com/1pXEIGStvN
— Barry Malone (@malonebarry) August 16, 2015
@DanielEtterFoto @ShelaghFogarty this must pull on the heart strings of fathers everywhere. It does mine...
— A Green Anisodactyl (@ngc_457) August 17, 2015
Sometimes even to live is an act of courage.
― Seneca https://t.co/hTsk2TcEDh
— J.Bibi (@SabriRuh) August 17, 2015
An entire country's pain captured in one father's face. Syrian refugee family arrives at Kos. Pic by @DanielEtterFoto pic.twitter.com/wMEUy5sUMQ
— Mary Fitzgerald (@MaryFitzger) August 18, 2015
The family, who had endured years of bombardments from the Syrian government, rebel forces and most recently Isis, hoped to make it to Germany.
Mr Etter, based in Barcelona but currently photographing migrants along European Union borders, said the mother – who has not been pictured – had worked as an English teacher.
He told Spiegel Online the family of four came ashore with eight others in a small rubber dingy designed for just three people.
“After more than two hours of driving the boat had lost air, water had leaked into it, the refugees were soaked when they arrived at the shore. They were then completely relieved to have arrived safely,” he said.
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“In that moment it all came at them together, the joy of having done it; the love for their family; the grief over what had happened.”
The family later stayed in a makeshift tent on another beach in Kos, before attempting to board the Eleftherios Venizelos established by Greek authorities to process Syrian refugees. “Whether they make it, I don’t know,” he said.
Mr Etter said although he was used to working as a photographer, witnessing many emotional scenes, he has never been so touched by an image. Looking at the photograph afterwards, he found “tears came again and again,” he told Spiegel Online.
“That’s never happened to me before.”