this is a baden—wurttemberg in southern germany. a far cry from the war in syria.al state, it is now home to one of the biggest refugee populations in the country. in the past few years around 150,000 people have sought asylum here. i am here to meet a small but growing number of refugees who have chosen to return to a life of danger over safety in europe. 27—year—old za kariya arrived in germany with high hopes. zakariya says he was ready to restart his career as a metalworker. but two years on, and things haven't worked out the way zakariya hoped. he struggles with the language and is yet to find a job. for the past seven months zakariya has been sharing a house with more than 20 other refugees. together with four others, zakariya lives eats and sleeps here in this one room. germany provides free housing to all refugees. but in order to afford better accommodation, zakariya would need to find work. so this is the job centre... these papers basically some up zakariya's life here in the last two years. he has applied forjobs, he has applied to learn german and all