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The situation has become even more fraught. This week, a fire burned down the Moria refugee camp on Lesvos, the Greek island where most refugees first set foot in Europe last year. The devastation left thousands without a home. During a 10-day trip in June, we talked to officials, migrants and activists in Athens, Lesvos and Thessaloniki, near the closed border of Macedonia, shutting migrants' way out. Our mission: to see if the technology that many of us use every day -- phones, the internet, messaging apps, social networks -- is helping during this crisis. Or not.

We met people from Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Morocco and Somalia, all on a journey they hoped would take them to safer and better lives, Everyone (except the children) has a phone, All rely on the internet to learn what's new and important, Facebook is a tool for escape and escapism, Power strips are the new water coolers, Here are a few of their stories, Five men sit around a battered, wooden patio table just outside the gate at Kara Tepe, an official refugee camp on Lesvos, All have their phones plugged into two power strips on top of the table, Smoke iphone s case 3d wafts from their cigarettes..

Beko Al-Falahi, a 28-year-old from Iraq, tells us he used to work as a US Army translator. He's wearing a camo hat, flip-flops and a shirt that reads, "Grace isn't a little prayer you say before receiving a meal. It's a way of life."In April, Pope Francis visited migrant detention centers on the Greek island of Lesvos. Beko Al-Falahi shows a photo of the Pope holding his son Tayim. He talks about his wife and son, Tayim, just 35 days old when they crossed the border. Now he's three months old. Al-Falahi says the hardest part of being here is seeing his son cry and not having enough milk to feed him.

But there's been one bright spot, In April, Pope Francis visited Moria, a detention camp a short drive away, iphone s case 3d and Al-Falahi and his family went to see him, He picks up his phone and shows us a photo of the Pope holding Tayim, just as he's about to give the baby a kiss, "I feel blessing come to my son," he says, I ask for a closer look, He hands me the phone, telling me to Google "Vatican photo in Lesbos."When I get home a week later, I do that, Sure enough, there the photo of Tayim with the Pope -- the first hit on Google Images , -- Richard Nieva..

The Eko station in Polykastro, Greece, has all the amenities of your run-of-the-mill gas station. Outside, pumps and picnic tables. Inside, a deli counter, an arcade claw machine full of toys and a minimart that sells snacks and sodas. Adele's "Someone Like You" plays in the background. But this roadside hub isn't like any of the other 91 Eko stations in Greece. Until last month, it was home to 3,000 migrants in a makeshift refugee camp. Now it's a ghost town. The stretch of land just past the gas pumps is deserted, but the signs that it was once a community of sorts remain. Abandoned canvas tents, made with white beams of wood that look like tree branches, were constructed by aid groups. Old camping tents line the road. We walk among sprawling piles of trash bags and old clothes -- a Disney blanket hanging from a fence, empty cans of baby food, packaging from a solar smartphone charger.

 
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