A Syrian volunteer team succeeded in bringing together a detainee, his children, his father, and the people of his village in the Jabal al-Zawiya area in the southern countryside of Idlib, after the man spent 9 years in regime prisons.

The young man, Maher, had been released from the prisons of the Syrian regime last April, and the volunteer team took the initiative to search for members of his family and facilitate his meeting with them.

The volunteer "Sarot machine" team documented the moments of the touching meeting between the detainee and his father and his children, who grew up while he was away from them, in a video posted by the team on its official page on Facebook.

The "Sarot Machine" is a humanitarian initiative launched by the Syrian youth Mohammed Hamza, which he named after the chancellor of the Syrian revolution, and one of its most prominent faces, Abdul Basit Al Sarout, a few days after his death last year.

Hamza allocated the profits of his shop in the German city of Gelsenkirchen - to sell hot drinks - to save the displaced and displaced families in many areas of northern Syria, which are experiencing difficult humanitarian situations and an unprecedented movement of displacement as a result of targeting the Syrian regime and its allies.

Hamza, who was born in the city of Aleppo in 1989, obtained the certificate of the Hotel Institute, and worked as a "chef" assistant in many Aleppo hotels for 12 years, and after the fierce attack of the regime on the city he was forced to seek refuge in Turkey in 2013, and spent two years in it before moving to Germany, and there he attended a German language course, worked in the field of trade and opened a store for smartphones and electronics in Gelsenkirchen.