This Group Is Bringing A Much-Needed Resource To Refugees In Greece: Clean Laundry

The Dirty Girls of Lesbos Island washes what's left behind on the beaches so items can be used again.
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Even shoes are cleaned so they be used again.
Tyson Sadler

Oh, by gosh, by golly, it's time for mistletoe and holly and Christmas stockings filled with candies, goodies and little treats. But this year, I’m finding my "stockings" discarded on the beach, left behind by newly arrived refugees. 

Thanks to the many local and foreign independent volunteers, many of the refugees who arrive in water-logged boats with cold and wet feet get dry socks and shoes. The Dirty Girls of Lesbos Island is one group that makes that possible.

Dirty Girls is the brainchild of Alison Terry-Evans, an Australian world traveler who has spent years on Lesbos prior to the current crisis. Alison saw the littered beaches as an opportunity to recycle and simultaneously provide a service.

Local volunteers gather the dirty clothes from the sand and rocks, place them in bags, label them, and leave them by the side of the road. Alison's team picks them up, gets them washed and dried, and then distributes the garments to the camps and outposts cropping up along the coast. Even heavy-duty blankets and shoes are sanitized so they can go to good use.  

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Sorting laundry that was collected from the beach in Lesbos.
Tyson Sadler

I love doing laundry. Folding and sorting for me has always been a near meditation; so much satisfaction for little actual elbow grease. And finding a mate for the odd sock or shoe is super satisfying. So visiting the huge washing and drying establishment, Ermes, owned and run by Peter Mylonas was thrilling.

Peter saw Alison collecting clothing on the beach and heading home to wash and dry. He generously offered his assistance, and the rest is history.

It seems that everyone loves Dirty Girls: the locals, the arrivals, the NGOs -- and me. Alison keeps the washing machines spinning thanks to private contributions. Want to help? Find Dirty Girls on Facebook.

Tyson Sadler
Tyson Sadler
Tyson Sadler
Tyson Sadler
Tyson Sadler
Tyson Sadler
Tyson Sadler
Tyson Sadler
 

RYOT and The Huffington Post are teaming to up present "The Crossing," an immersive reporting series hosted by Susan Sarandon chronicling the refugee crisis as it unfolds in Greece. Watch our Snapchat (@HuffPost) and The World Post's Instagram feed (@TheWorldPost) for coverage this week, and check back for upcoming virtual reality and 360 films about the people making the perilous journey from the Middle East toward safety.

READ MORE
-- Susan Sarandon Joins Sea Rescue Team On Search For Refugees Headed To Greece

-- Lesbos' Lifejacket Graveyard: Susan Sarandon Visits The Frontlines Of The Refugee Crisis

-- Susan Sarandon Is Welcoming Refugees To Greece

-- At Lesbos, Children's Pool Toys Are Evidence Of Dangerous Journey

The Crossing
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Actress Susan Sarandon is teaming up with The Huffington Post and RYOT for "The Crossing" -- an inside look at the humans and the humanity within the ongoing refugee crisis. (credit:Tyson Sadler)
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Sarandon is on the ground in Greece to meet, learn and listen to the people making the perilous journey toward Western Europe -- or wherever else they can find safety. (credit:Tyson Sadler)
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"Who are these refugees? Where are they from? What led them here? Where will they go? I have come to hear their stories and learn," Sarandon writes. (credit:Tyson Sadler)
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"Everywhere you look, up and down this coast, there is evidence of the perilous crossing from Turkey to Greece. Life jackets, inner tubes and shredded rubber boats have become a fixture on the shores of the idyllic island of Lesbos," Sarandon writes. (credit:David Darg)
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On Lesbos, Sarandon met with "the Dirty Girls of Lesbos Island," a group that washes what's left behind on the beaches so items can be used again. (credit:Tyson Sadler)
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When Sarandon receives a call from her daughter and granddaughter while on Lesbos, an amazing situation unfolds. (credit:Fabian Melber)
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