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Anxiety filled the air as they were given an appointment at the immigration office scheduled for Wednesday, leaving them in the dark about what to expect.
Twenty-two-year-old Rahma Aldeiri braced herself for the worst possible outcome.
“We had no idea what was coming,” she shared with 9news.com.au. “Would they split up our family? Would my sisters and I receive permanent residency while my parents were left out?”
Yet, to their immense relief, the family finally received the news they had been hoping for over the past 14 years.
Instead, her family got the news they’d waited 14 years for.
Every single one of them – dad Sultan, mum Reem, Rahma, and her twin sisters Hareer and Mesk – had all been granted permanent residency.
Their fight was finally over.
”We were all just screaming and crying,” Rahma said.
“We worked so hard this entire 14 years … it was definitely worth it, but the process could have been easier.”
The Aldeiri family came to Australia from Jordan in 2011, when Rahma was eight.
They were here to visit her maternal grandmother, an Iraqi refugee who had become an Australian citizen.
Neighbours called them a “role model family”, and “great citizens without being actual citizens”.
But their future was uncertain.
The family’s protection visa applications made it all the way to the Federal Court but were denied.
So too were applications for child visas for Rahma and her sisters.
She was 15 and living in fear of being deported.
“That was a terrible time,” she said.
“I’d almost be finishing high school, but I couldn’t even celebrate that because I didn’t know what would happen next week.”
The following year, the family were given an official deportation notice.
Then the pandemic hit, borders slammed shut, and the Aldeiri family couldn’t leave.
So their immigration lawyer, Simon Jeans, kept fighting for them to stay.
He made last-ditch applications for a ministerial intervention but it still took years for the family’s case to be seen by Minister for Immigration Tony Burke in 2025.
By that time, the Aldeiri family had built a life in Perth.
Rahma had earned a nursing degree from Curtin University, and her twin sisters Hareer and Mesk had finished high school.
Being sent back to Jordan, a country they could barely remember, was unthinkable.
“It just doesn’t make any sense for us to go back, we have nothing there. This is our home, why would we leave our home?” Rahma told 9news.com.au in February.
Words can’t describe the relief she felt when they were granted permanent residency.
“You helped give our family a voice when we felt voiceless,” she wrote.
“You kept us going when things felt impossible.”
Now she’s looking forward to a stable future here in Australia.
As permanent residents, Rahma and her parents can finally get permanent work.
Her younger sisters, both 19, can also start pursuing careers without fear of being deported.
Mesk is already studying engineering on a scholarship at the University of Technology, Sydney.
But Hareer, who had been unable to secure a scholarship, wasn’t able to start a teaching degree due to high international student fees.
That won’t be a problem now.
”Now we can buy a house, now we can have a little holiday … I still can’t process it,” Rahma said.
“No more applications, no more chasing up Medicare, no more stressing about waiting for a call, nothing.
“Just you wake up and it’s nice, it’s silent … it’s all over, and we can just live normally now.”